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.

April 3, 2013

Victim upbeat as commission makes an impressive start

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

April 4, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

Analysis

Twenty years ago Bill Nelson left court a crushed man, his solicitors telling him to give up his quest for redress as a child sex abuse victim because the Catholic Church had all the power.

On Wednesday he sat in room 3.3 of the County Court awaiting the opening hearing of the royal commission on child sex abuse and reflected: ”Now I’m in court, and it’s on our side. It’s huge, it’s historic!”

His eager anticipation exemplified the mood of the victims who filled the courtroom to hear commission chairman Peter McClellan outline the plans, processes and priorities for the coming years.

And what they heard was highly encouraging. Justice McClellan was frank and forthright. The commission will be expensive. It will struggle to finish by the end of 2015. It is an enormous and complex undertaking that will hear from thousands of victims, and from many institutions, mostly taking a highly defensive posture.

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.

Royal commission into child sexual abuse starts in Australia: over 5,000 testimonials expected

AUSTRALIA
The Voice of Russia

A historic royal commission in child sex abuse has started in Australia. The six commissioners will have to hear to over 5,000 testimonials, look into multiple organizations, including religious, and elaborate recommendations for the future.

Speaking at the opening ceremony Julia Gillard, the Australian Prime Minister, said it was an “important moral moment” for Australia as “some very uncomfortable truths” will be revealed.

The first announcement of the commission’s formation appeared in November last year, following persistent claims from police that the Roman Catholic Church had concealed evidence of paedophile priests.

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

Silence is not golden, these terrible stories must be told

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Patrick Carlyon
From:Herald Sun
April 03, 2013

IT was the start of the end of the silence, and wasn’t it a racket? Yet officially at least, the “survivors” of child sex abuse who have waited decades to be unburdened of their stories must wait a little longer.

Inside the Royal Commission, where the hands on the wall clock were missing, chair Justice Peter McClellan announced that evidence was unlikely to start being heard in public until October.

Outside the County Court, however, where trams tinkled and the wind bit, some survivors rushed to tell their secrets now.

They wore bright scarves and waved placards. Hearty greetings and outbreaks of laughter disguised a united grief.

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

POLL: Whistleblower laws under scrutiny

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By MICHELLE HARRIS, State Political Reporter
April 3, 2013

DETECTIVE Chief Inspector Peter Fox has questioned the adequacy of whistleblower laws after being told his public allegations of interference with police investigations, which sparked two inquiries into child sex abuse, did not qualify him for protection.

Mr Fox said NSW Police representatives told him that his publicly aired concerns – which included allegations members of the Catholic Church in the Hunter had sought to cover up sex abuse and senior police removed him from investigations into such matters – were not protected as public-interest disclosures.

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

Church welcomes scrutiny

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

April 4, 2013

Thomas McIlroy

The administrator of Canberra’s Catholic archdiocese welcomed the opening hearings of the royal commission on child sexual abuse on Wednesday.

Speaking while on leave, Monsignor John Woods said he hoped the inquiry ”would be for the good of all Australians, especially our children”.

Monsignor Woods will serve as the administrator of the archdiocese until the appointment of a new archbishop. His predecessor, former archbishop of Canberra and Goulburn Mark Coleridge, was this week appointed to a newly created Catholic body dealing with the commission. The 13-member truth justice and healing council will oversee the engagement with the royal commission, assisted by lay staff.

Council chief executive Francis Sullivan said council members were selected for their expertise, including across sexual abuse, paedophilia, trauma, mental illness, suicide and public policy.

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

No more suffering in silence for sexually abused

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

Janet Fife-Yeomans
The Daily Telegraph
April 04, 2013

THE long-suffering victims of child sex abuse will finally be given a voice after decades of suffering in silence.

It’s expected more than 5000 will relive their harrowing ordeals as the royal commission into institutionalised sex abuse against children began yesterday.

The six commissioners, headed by Justice Peter McClellan, said the victims – of all ages and backgrounds – would no longer be ignored and the commissioners were expecting to hear “serious and often shocking allegations”.

“Part of the task given to us is to bear witness, on behalf of the nation, to the abuse and consequential trauma inflicted on many people who have suffered sexual abuse as children,” he said.

The commission has chosen the non-threatening surroundings of regional motel function rooms for the victims to open their hearts and reveal their most agonising and painful secrets.

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

After the pain is the punishment

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

DECADES of pain and torment are set to be revealed with the first steps in the government’s royal commission into institutionalised child sex abuse.

Thousands of childhood abuse victims are preparing for the hopefully liberating process of explaining the crimes they endured.

As stressful as this will be, the challenge of giving evidence does not compare to the ordeals many have already suffered. These Australians remain physically and emotionally scarred by the cruelty inflicted upon them and their numbers are such that the royal commission will continue for years.

The commission’s first task is to listen, but listening will not be enough. Beyond the gathering of evidence and the agonies of revelation, action is required.

This will be the true test of the royal commission. While even the hearing of victims is to be applauded, this will be undercut unless it is supported by a meaningful legal response.

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

More than 5000 victims to give evidence

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

The Royal Commission into child abuse has warned that it expects to run longer than its allotted time and is likely to hear the stories of over five thousand victims.

Hamish Fitzsimmons

Transcript

TONY JONES, PRESENTER: In its historic first sitting, the national Royal Commission into child abuse has already warned that it’s likely to overrun its 2015 deadline because of the scale of the job ahead.

From Melbourne, Hamish Fitzsimmons reports.

HAMISH FITZSIMMONS, REPORTER: The commission says it’s already received 1,200 calls about submissions. It expects many more to come forward.

PETER MCCLELLAN, COMMISSION CHAIRMAN: It has been made clear to us that it is likely that there are thousands of people throughout Australia who want to give an account of their experience to the commission. It seems likely that at least 5,000 people will want to talk to the commission.

HAMISH FITZSIMMONS: Some think the real number of people wanting to tell their story will well exceed that figure.

VLADIMIR SELAKOVIS, ABUSE SURVIVOR: Thousands upon thousands – not just hundreds; there are thousands upon thousands of these people who are in exactly the same situation as all of us. Our stories may seem the same, but we all travelled the same road, but it was a different situation for all of us.

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

Abuse inquiry warns of cost blowouts

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Pia Akerman
From:The Australian
April 04, 2013

COSTS and deadlines for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse have blown out before any evidence has been heard, with nearly $1 million spent for each week since the inquiry was announced.

At the commission’s opening session in Melbourne yesterday, chairman Peter McClellan warned the timelines for the inquiry were “unlikely” to be met, though legal processes to elicit documents from the Catholic Church were already under way.

“The task we have is large, the issues are complex,” Justice McClellan said. “But we are now in a position to actively begin the work of gathering the stories and examining the responses of institutions.” He said the commission had spent or committed to spend $22m in the 25 weeks since it was announced by the Gillard government, with the money spent on start-up costs such as fitting out premises and buying an IT system.

“The running costs, including the cost of travel and resourcing commissioner hearings throughout Australia, will have the consequence that the work . . . will continue to require the commitment of very significant sums of public money,” Justice McClellan 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.

Traumatic, costly, complex, shocking: bring it on

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Stuart Rintoul
From:The Australian
April 04, 2013

“THE task we have is large, the issues are complex,” royal commissioner Peter McClellan said, after setting out the magnitude of the inquiry into child-sex abuse.

The first hearing day was brief, a first step towards a dark and ominous mountain. It heard no evidence and none will be heard until the last quarter of the year at least, although Justice McClellan revealed that the cost of the commission was already at $22 million and notices had been served on “particular bodies within the Catholic Church in Australia and its insurer, the Salvation Army and the NSW Director of Public Prosecutions, seeking the production of documents”.

Justice McClellan and senior counsel assisting the inquiry Gail Furness warned repeatedly that evidence given to the commission would be traumatic, but victims’ advocates left the Victorian County Court grimly satisfied with what they had heard.

Broken Rites researcher Wayne Chamley, who had pressed for a royal commission for 15 years as the organisation pursued pedophile priests who were in many cases shielded by the church, was feeling “rapt”.

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.

Children betrayed: now for the healing

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

April 4, 2013

Barney Zwartz

The royal commission into child sex abuse is now operating. It expects more than 5000 people to share their experiences, has already spent more than $22 million, and is unlikely to complete its task by the end of 2015 as requested.

Victims can now contact the royal commission to register to tell their stories because trained staff are ready, chairman Justice Peter McClellan said at the first public hearing, in Melbourne.

He said the commission had served notice to produce documents on the Catholic Church, its insurer, the Salvation Army and the NSW Director of Public Prosecutions.

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

Archbishop silent over accusations of abuse by clergyman

MALTA
Malta Today

Nestor Laiviera

Archbishop Paul Cremona has refused to react to allegations that a prominent priest has abused of an emotionally and psychologically vulnerable person for sexual purposes.

Over the past few days, two police reports were filed against the same priest by two different people. While separate, both reports tie in as they deal with the same case.

The most serious of the two police reports deals with accusations by a person who alleges that she was abused by a prominent priest for sexual purposes despite being vulnerable both emotionally and physically.

She alleges that the abuse took place over a number of months, and that it involved sexual acts which he either persuaded her to perform on him, or her performed on her.

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

Priest accused of abuse in 1980s

NEW MEXICO
ABQ Journal

By T.S. Last / Journal Staff Writer on Wed, Apr 3, 2013

A 37-year-old man filed a lawsuit in Second Judicial District Court in Albuquerque on Tuesday alleging that a Roman Catholic priest in Questa sexually molested him over a 1 1/2-year period in the 1980s.

The lawsuit alleges that the Rev. Michael O’Brien abused the plaintiff, identified only as “John Doe” in the complaint, beginning when he was about 10 or 11 years old and while he was in training to become an altar boy at St. Anthony Parish in Questa, north of Taos.

According to the complaint, the alleged abuse began with what the now-deceased O’Brien, known as “Father Mike,” called “massage time” and “escalated to the point that Fr. O’Brien committed many counts of criminal sexual contact and penetration against Plaintiff.”

The lawsuit states that the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, which oversees parishes in northern New Mexico, and St. Anthony Parish knew or should have known that O’Brien was a pedophile priest and had “unbridled access to children.” It further alleges that the archdiocese placed O’Brien and other pedophile priests into New Mexico parishes and “deliberately chose to conceal the fact of the priest’s problems.”

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.

Inquiry Into Suspended Troy Priest Is Now An FBI Case

MICHIGAN
Deadline Detroit

April 3rd, 2013

Three months after a Troy parish priest was abruptly suspended and kicked out of his St. Thomas More Catholic Church home, FBI agents have taken over an inquiry into his handling of more than $400,00, Carol Hopkins reports in The Oakland Press.

Rev. Edward Belczak was asked to temporarily step aside from his duties at the church on North Adams Road in Troy in January during the probes that he mishandled at least $429,000 in church money. . . .

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

Church agonises, Hollywood seizes moment

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

April 4, 2013

Karl Quinn
National Film Editor for Fairfax Media

The Catholic Church’s handling of abuse allegations will soon face the full glare of Hollywood’s publicity machine, with Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks studio backing a feature based on a true scandal involving paedophile priests in Boston.

As yet untitled, the film will be based on a year-long series of reports by investigative journalists at The Boston Globe, which earned a Pulitzer prize in 2003.

The Catholic Church’s handling of the abuse scandal is increasingly rich territory for filmmakers. In 2006, Amy Berg’s documentary Deliver Us From Evil looked at the case of a paedophile priest repeatedly moved around the US by church authorities well aware of his offending. Now showing is Alex Gibney’s Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God, which examines the abuse of boys at a deaf school in Wisconsin from the 1950s to the 1970s.

A Polish feature film, In The Name Of, first shown at the Berlin Film Festival this year, takes a more sympathetic approach to the story of a homosexual priest.

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.

Gardai informed about abuse claim against Limerick priest

IRELAND
Limerick Leader

By Mike Dwane
Published on 03/04/2013

GARDAI have been made aware of an allegation of child sexual abuse made against a priest of the Limerick diocese.

The allegation is one of sexual impropriety involving a minor and dates back to the 1990s when the priest was serving in a parish in the city.

Mass-goers in the priest’s County Limerick parish were told at the weekend that the cleric had voluntarily stepped aside from ministry on being made aware of the complaint last week. A canonical investigation into the matter has now been set in motion.

A source familiar with the priest involved described the allegation as being “at the lower end of the spectrum” and said the priest would “strenuously deny” any wrongdoing.

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.

Welcome to the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

Latest news
•3 April 20113 – Image gallery from first Hearing
See images from the first Hearing held on 3 April 2013.
•2 April 2013 – First Hearing webcast
The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (the Commission) will hold its first sitting at 10.00 am on Wednesday 3 April 2013 at the County Court of Victoria, 250 William Street, Melbourne.

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.

Call to clarify abuse support training

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AAP
April 03, 2013

THE peak national body supporting adults abused as children says the royal commission’s off to a great start, but is concerned about how well trained its support staff are.

Adults Surviving Child Abuse (ASCA) president Cathy Kezelman says the commission’s willingness to communicate and inform while setting reasonable expectations is positive, adding that a very thorough process had been undertaken.

She wants to ensure, however, all support personnel have had adequate training, particularly to prevent victims from being retraumatised.

“It’s very important for the health and wellbeing of everyone coming forward, but also for everyone involved in the commission,” Dr Kezelman told AAP.

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 Archbishop Expresses Regret To Victims Of Sexual Abuse

OREGON
OPB

OPB | April 02, 2013

Portland has a new archbishop. The Most Reverend Alexander Sample leads an archdiocese of approximately 400,000 Catholics.

He was installed at a formal ceremony at the University of Portland Tuesday.

A Vatican delegate read out the apostolic letter of appointment in front of the public and representatives from around the world.

Once Sample took a seat in the bishop’s throne, he officially assumed his new position.

In the Archbishop’s sermon, he spoke explicitly about the Catholic church’s recent sex abuse scandals.

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

Pope Francis hasn’t done anything unusual or unexpected in regard to clergy sex abuse

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on April 02, 2013

“He’s done something unusual/unexpected practically every day.” That’s how an anonymous but high ranking Vatican official describes Pope Francis.

[click here]

Except, however, in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases. So far in that arena, tragically, we see no changes whatsoever.

Pope Francis is being proclaimed as a master of the touching and unexpected gesture. He’s known for his simple lifestyle, and his openness and willingness to meet with “regular” people by doing things like taking the bus to work.

But the sole gesture he’s made regarding the church’s central crisis has been a hurtful one: meeting with disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law.

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

Niederlande: Gericht hebt Verbot des Pädophilen-Vereins “Martijn” wieder auf

NIEDERLANDE
Short News

Das Berufungsgericht in Leeuwarden hat am heutigen Dienstag das Verbot gegen den Pädophilen-Verein “Martijn” wieder aufgehoben. Der Verein würde nicht für soziale Unruhen sorgen, hieß es unter anderem in der Urteilsbegründung. “Martijn” wurde 2012 verboten (ShortNews berichtete).

In der Urteilsbegründung gab das Gericht weiter an, dass die Texte und Bilder auf der Vereinswebsite nicht strafbar wären. Auch könne man den Verein nicht verbieten, nur weil einige Mitglieder wegen Kindesmissbrauch vorbestraft sind.

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.

DreamWorks dreht Film über Sexskandale in US-Diözese

LOS ANGELES (CA)
News

Los Angeles – Das von Steven Spielberg mitbegründete Hollywood-Studio DreamWorks greift einen kontroversen Stoff auf.

Zusammen mit der Produktionsfirma Participant Media hat sich DreamWorks die Rechte zu einer Enthüllungsgeschichte über sexuellen Missbrauch durch katholische Priester in der Erzdiözese Boston gesichert. Wie das US-Branchenblatt «Hollywood Reporter» berichtete, übernimmt Tom McCarthy («Station Agent», «Ein Sommer in New York – The Visitor») die Regie.

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Heibel: „Verfahren in Südafrika muss ein Ende haben“

DEUTSCHLAND
WZ

Von Peter Korall

Bischof Stephan Ackermann soll das Gespräch mit Georg K. suchen, der vor Gericht steht.

Willich. Johannes Heibel, Vorsitzender der Initiative gegen sexuellen Missbrauch, versucht, Bewegung in den Fall des gebürtigen Willicher Geistlichen Georg K. zu bringen. K. steht in Johannesburg vor Gericht (die WZ berichtete). Ihm wird vorgeworfen, sich zwei Jugendlichen während eines Kommunioncamps genähert zu haben. Zudem hat er massive Missbräuche in Deutschland eingestanden. Das Verfahren in Johannesburg kommt unterdessen nicht voran, immer wieder wird es von Anträgen der Verteidigung verzögert.

Heibel hat sich an den Trierer Bischof Stephan Ackermann gewandt. Der ist Missbrauch-Beauftragter der katholischen Kirche und reist demnächst nach Südafrika. Dort trifft er unter anderem auf Pfarrer Hippler, der Georg K. derzeit betreut.

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.

All abusers must be punished: victims

AUSTRALIA
Telegraph

AN abuse victims advocate says nobody should be spared punishment for crimes against children, be they a charity, church, government or a 99-year-old individual.

On the first day of the royal commission into child sex abuse, Leonie Sheedy of the Care Leavers of Australia Network fought back tears as she called for the royal commission to “get it right”.

She described the abuse of children in care as “Australia’s grubbiest little secret”, and said she wanted justice for victims.

“I want to see people who have sexually used children … be made accountable,” Ms Sheedy said.

“I don’t care how old they are. I think if you’re 99 and you’re still alive you should face the full force of the courts of this country, you should be sentenced to appropriate sentences.

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.

Royal Commission …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse: Banners said ‘You have the records of our abuse’

Erin Marie
Herald Sun
April 03, 2013

VICTIMS of child sex abuse wept openly in the street as the Royal Commission commenced its long-awaited hearing this morning.

More than 20 advocates wielding placards rallied outside the County Court in Melbourne as The Royal

Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse commenced its long-awaited inquiry.

Victims gathered descended outside the court eagerly awaiting the outcome of the first hour-long hearing, some armed with signs which read: “You have the records of our abuse” and “Government OK’S abuse in state-run orphanages”.

Victims, organisations and advocates poured onto William St following the hearing, with some openly embracing and others appearing teary-eyed by the emotion of the inquiry’s launch.

Leonie Sheedy of the Care Leavers of Australia Network (CLAN) – a network for people raised in the nation’s orphanages, Children’s Homes and foster care – said the first day of proceedings had been “overwhelming” for the organisation’s members.

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.

Royal Commission’s start is itself a blessing

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Peter Fox
From: News Limited Network
April 03, 2013

FORMER NSW Detective Inspector Peter Fox’s decision to blow the whistle on a Catholic Church cover-up of child sexual abuse was the catalyst for Julia Gillard’s announcement of the Royal Commission, which starts today.

I am absolutely delighted that this day has finally come. A lot of people have been waiting for so long for something like this to happen.

I realise that the hard evidence will be a long slow process, but just to see it begin is fantastic.

Through various means about six or eight of childhood sexual abuse victims have contacted me since I spoke out in November and I have steered them in the right direction to get help.

But the start of this Royal Commission means that a lot more people will now be prepared to come forward.

This has been a very difficult subject for a very long time and a lot of people have kept it as a deep dark secret.

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

Abuse hearings ‘unable to meet deadline’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

PIA AKERMAN
From:The Australian
April 03, 2013

THE royal commission into child sexual abuse has leapt into action by serving notices on the Catholic Church to produce documents, while warning the timelines laid out for the massive inquiry are “unlikely” to be met.

Commission chairman Justice Peter McClellan said he expected evidence would not be taken until at least the last quarter of this year.

He said expects the commission will hear serious and shocking allegations and that he had been advised the commissioners themselves and their staff could be harmed by constantly hearing the allegations.

Justice McClellan said for that reason it would not be possible for the commission to continuously listen to victims’ stories.

The commission’s opening hearing in Melbourne today heard the 2016 deadline for its final report was unrealistic because of the number of people expected to give personal accounts and the number of institutions affected by allegations.

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.

Royal Commission a time to tell the truth

AUSTRALIA
ABC Gippsland

By Celine Foenander

A group which represents children who grew up in orphanages, children’s homes and foster care is calling on its members to be brave enough to tell their story to a Royal Commission.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse got underway in Melbourne this morning.

The Care Leavers Australia Network or CLAN says it will support its members through the process, many of whom are in Gippsland.

“The public needs to know what happened to us, we’re the invisible children and when we did try to speak out, we weren’t believed,” CLAN executive officer and co-founder Leonie Sheedy told ABC Gippsland.

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.

Wide scope for abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
9 News

[with video]

The royal commission into sexual abuse in institutions will give a voice to victims and gain vital information to deal with cases in the future, its chairman says.

The commission will examine all institutions in a far-ranging inquiry that will last at least three years.

More than 5000 people are expected to tell their stories meaning the commission will struggle to meet its deadlines, chair Justice Peter McClellan said.

The commission will look at a number of issues associated with the abuse and lessons that can be learned.

People who have suffered abuse in institutions such as churches, schools, scouting groups, orphanages, athletic clubs, childcare centres and detention centres will be invited to give evidence.

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Royal Commission begins with warning about workload

AUSTRALIA
ABC – The World Today

ELEANOR HALL: Let’s go now to Melbourne, where the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse has opened this morning. The hearing began with a warning about the size of the Commission’s workload and a prediction that it won’t meet its reporting deadline.

The chairman, Justice Peter McClellan, said he expects many thousands of witnesses to give evidence about suffering sexual abuse in institutions.

Simon Lauder was at the County Court in Melbourne as the inquiry began and he joins us now.

Simon, the Commissioner is clearly indicating that he has a very large task. Just how wide-ranging is this inquiry?

SIMON LAUDER: It’s possibly Australia’s most wide-ranging Royal Commission ever. The name says it all really, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. So that’s anyone under the age of 18 whose been, who was abused in any institution, be it private or government run and that can be a sporting institution, an educational one.

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.

Sex abuse victims asked to be patient

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Genevieve Gannon
AAP
April 03, 2013

ABUSE victims who have waited decades to tell their story have been asked to be patient as the royal commission into responses to child sex abuse begins the lengthy process of collecting information.

More than 5000 people are expected to approach the royal commission to share their experiences, commission chair Justice Peter McClellan said.

Counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness SC, said the volume of submissions meant it could take some time for staff to respond.

“While I understand that people may have been waiting years if not decades to tell their story, I ask each of you to be patient,” Ms Furness said on Wednesday.

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Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse updates

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Janet Fife-Yeomans
From:The Daily Telegraph
April 03, 2013

VICTIMS of child sex abuse wept openly in the street as the Royal Commission commenced its long-awaited hearing this morning.

More than 20 advocates wielding placards rallied outside the County Court in Melbourne as The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse commenced its long-awaited inquiry.

Victims gathered descended outside the court eagerly awaiting the outcome of the first hour-long hearing, some armed with signs which read: “You have the records of our abuse” and “Government OK’s abuse in state-run orphanages”.

11.04am: The Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse will look at the sentences handed down in the courts for child predators.

Counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness SC, said the Scouts, Girl Guides, orphanages, swimming, child care centres, kindergartens and little athletics are among the institutions to be investigated by the royal commission into child sex abuse.

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

Church will pay compo to child sex victims

AUSTRALIA
Otago Daily Times (New Zealand)

The Catholic Church wants the truth exposed at the royal commission into responses to child sex abuse, and will pay compensation to victims, its representative says.

Truth Justice and Healing Council chief executive Francis Sullivan says the commission will be embarrassing for the church but it is imperative the truth emerges.

“We are going to encourage, wherever possible, individuals to come forward with their experiences so that the truth can come out,” he said.

“The church leadership in Australia have made it clear that they are going to be open and honest and co-operate fully.”

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Abuse wrongs ‘must be acknowledged’

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The first sitting of the royal commission into sexual abuse has heard past wrongs must be acknowledged.

Justice Peter McClellan was outlining the process under which the commission will operate.

He said the commission had to examine some difficult truths.

‘The community has come to acknowledge that fundamental wrongs have been committed in the past which have caused great trauma and lasting damage to many people,’ Justice McClellan said at the first sitting in Melbourne on Wednesday.

The commission will not begin hearing evidence until later this year.

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Does my voice count? Royal Commission into child abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC Sydney

[with audio]

Victims of institutional child sexual abuse in Australia continue to question the value of speaking out, even though a Royal Commission into the crimes has begun its work. A total of six commissioners, led by Justice Peter McClelland, held an initial meeting in Melbourne to outline how the Royal Commission will now tackle the process of seeking justice for an epidemic of abuse that has scarred thousands of Australians for decades.

As the Federal government also announced free legal assistance to victims, Tony called 702 Mornings, emotionally shaken as he recounted abuse at the hands of a Catholic brother at a school in Burwood in the early 1960s.

“I thought I’d dealt with it, I thought I’d got over it,” Tony said, his voice shaking as he described the unwelcome memories flooding back.

And to compound the original abuse, Tony said he had found the school unwilling and secretive when he had made an approach hoping to speak to the brother, to seek an apology and offer forgiveness as the “Christian thing to do.”

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Church determined the truth be told

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Leader

Published: 7 April 2013

AS the Church announced members of the council that will oversee its engagement with the Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane has reaffirmed his commitment to working with the commission.

Australian Catholic Bishops Conference president Archbishop Denis Hart and Catholic Religious Australia president Sister of Charity Annette Cunliffe announced the members of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council (TJHC) on Tuesday (April 2).

The TJHC will oversee the Church’s engagement with the Royal Commission.

Council chief executive officer Francis Sullivan welcomed the announcement saying the 13-member council was made up of men and women with professional and other expertise, especially across child sexual abuse, paedophilia, trauma, mental illness, suicide and public policy.

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Answering your questions …

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Answering your questions on The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

Tory Shepherd
adelaidenow
April 03, 2013

LATE last year, a NSW police officer made shocking allegations about child-sex abuse and cover-ups within the Catholic Church and the police force.

That started a snowball effect, a rallying cry for a federal Royal Commission to investigate institutional sex abuse once and for all.

Within days, Prime Minister Julia Gillard ordered that such a commission be established to investigate child-sex offenders and those who protected them, and those who “averted their eyes” to what was going on.

Now The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has held its first hearing in Melbourne.

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Australia opens royal commission into child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Times (UK)

More than 5,000 people are expected to appear before a royal commission into child sex abuse that opens in Australia today.

Julia Gillard, the Prime Minister, warned Australians on the first day of the inquiry, which will examine decades of child abuse in church and state institutions, that they faced “some very uncomfortable truths”.

“This is an important moral moment for our nation,” Ms Gillard told ABC Radio as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse got under way at the Victorian County Court in Melbourne.

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Catholic church urged to speed up abuse compensation payments

NETHERLANDS
Expatica

The Catholic church must speed up the processing of sexual abuse damages claims and complete the hundreds of payments by the end of the year, parliament has told the church authorities.

Last week, Wim Deetman who chaired the commission investigating the abuse called on the church to increase the tempo of settlements, a position now echoed by a majority of MPs.

Last month it emerged the church has so far paid out €3.1 million to abuse victims. Compensation is made on a sliding scale of one to five.

‘If you consider how long the church has hidden the abuse, then they shold want to solve this as quickly as possible,’ VVD parliamentarian Ard van de Steur told Nos television.

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Abuse royal commission begins work

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

April 3, 2013

Patrick Caruana and Genevieve Gannon
AAP

Finally, the powerful people are here to help.

It is only the beginning of a long and traumatic process but victims and their families have tearfully embraced after waiting decades for the royal commission into responses to child sex abuse.

Chrissie Foster, whose daughter died of a medication overdose after being abused by a priest, said it was a day she thought would never come.

“It’s an amazing thing to sit in there with those powerful people and hear what they’re going to do for future children and right the wrongs of the past,” she said after the commission’s first hearing.

“I’m just so overwhelmed and happy that this is happening in our country.”

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Australia launches national child sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
7 News

MELBOURNE (AFP) – Australia opened a national probe into child sex abuse on Wednesday, with premier Julia Gillard warning of “uncomfortable truths” as institutions including schools and churches come under scrutiny.

Gillard ordered the inquiry in November after a decade of growing pressure to investigate widespread allegations of paedophilia, two months after the Catholic Church in Victoria revealed hundreds of children had been abused.

“This is an important moral moment for our nation,” Gillard told ABC radio as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse began at the Victorian County Court in Melbourne.

“When I established this royal commission I understood that it was going to require our whole country to stare some very uncomfortable truths in the face,” the prime minister said.

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Factbox: the royal commission into child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
SBS

The first sitting of the royal commission into institutional child sexual abuse began today in Melbourne.

WHY IS IT HAPPENING?

The main aim of the royal commission is to investigate systemic failures within church and state-run institutions relating to child sexual abuse and related matters.

Earlier this year Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced the terms of a Royal Commission into institutional child sexual abuse.

A joint statement from Prime Minister Julia Gillard, Mr Dreyfus and Families and Community Services Minister Jenny Macklin said the commission hearings would “mark the start of a healing process for survivors and their families”.

“The royal commission will enable thousands of Australians who suffered as children to recount their experiences and express feelings that many carry to this day as a result of the harm caused to them,” the statement said.

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Abuse royal commission expects 5000 submissions

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

April 3, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

The royal commission into child sex abuse is now open for business. It expects more than 5000 submissions, has already spent more than $22 million, and is unlikely to complete its task by the end of 2015 as requested.

From today, victims can contact the royal commission to register to tell their stories because trained staff are now ready, chairman Justice Peter McClellan announced at the commission’s first public hearing, in Melbourne.

He said the commission had already serviced notice to produce documents on the Catholic Church, its insurer, the Salvation Army and the NSW Director of Public Prosecutions.

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Finally, the child victims can speak at the royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Peter Fox
From:Herald Sun
April 04, 2013

OVER decades I have investigated and witnessed the terrible lifelong effect of child sexual abuse on victims and their families.

After seeing systems fail those victims, I finally joined the call for a federal royal commission by writing to the NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell last November. Now we have a chance to get this right.

The Australian Royal Commission examining Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has an enormous assignment before it: listening to hundreds, if not thousands, of witnesses, and investigating and examining evidence, before making nation-changing recommendations.

It’s not going to be easy, and no one is imagining that it will be. Public expectations are high, as they should be. Just because this is going to be difficult and painful doesn’t mean we shouldn’t go there. Australians are noted for tackling difficult situations.

Similar commissions and inquiries have been conducted overseas, exposing child sexual abuse of horrific proportions. The scale of these crimes shocked the US, Canada, the Netherlands, Austria and elsewhere in Europe.

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Catholic Church comes under attack

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Andrew Bolt
From:Herald Sun
April 04, 2013

THERE’S a smell of burning Christian.

And the royal commission into child sexual abuse in institutions is stoking a hot fire. The commission opened yesterday with ominous warnings that suggest the Catholic Church will be under serious ideological attack.

Royal commissioner Peter McClellan declared there had been “changes in power” in society, thanks in part to the “women’s movement” , and we should expect “changes in the culture and management practices of institutions”.

Was he referring to the church? Must it fit in more with these secular, feminist and even anti-clerical times? Incidentally, all three barristers assisting the commission are women.

True, McClellan will also investigate abuse in state-run institutions and even sporting clubs, but his commission will inevitably be influenced by a media-class culture that has a patricidal hatred of the Catholic Church to the exclusion of worse sinners.

Take comedian Josh Thomas on the ABC’s Q&A on Monday. Faced with a Catholic archbishop who opposed gay marriage, Thomas blustered for two minutes: “You play a constant game of stop hitting yourself . . . Sodom and Gomorrah. It’s pretty odd I reject that.”

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Australia begins child sex abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Deutsche Welle

An investigation into widespread child sex abuse in state and religious institutions in Australia has begun. The inquiry is expected to hear from more than 5,000 people.

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard announced the royal commission last November in response to growing allegations of child sex abuse against the Catholic Church. In September, the Church in the southern state of Victoria admitted to more than 600 cases of children being abused by pedophile priests since the 1930s. However, the inquiry is not specific to the Catholic Church and will cast a wide net over all institutions.

It is being conducted to investigate how widespread alleged abuse has been, but also gain an understanding of how institutions respond to such allegations. It will look into all institutions that work with children, including those run by the government, other religious groups and non-profit organizations.

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Items Seized During Sexual Torture Investigation of Former Pastor

ALABAMA
WHNT

[with video]

FRANKLIN COUNTY, Ala. (WHNT) – A former Franklin County pastor faces serious sexual abuse allegations.

Sheriff’s investigators say 72-year-old Freddy Hovater is accused of sexual torture, sexual abuse, and enticing a child.

Detectives say Hovater was arrested at his home in October 2011. A Franklin County grand jury handed down an indictment for the alleged crimes during its most recent session.

According to Franklin County Sheriff, Shannon Oliver, Freddy Hovater knew his eight-year-old victim very well.

According to investigators, the sexual abuse happened inside Hovater’s Spruce Pine home for nearly a year.

“It’s very disturbing,” said Oliver. “I`m really kinda lost for words why anyone would do that.”

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Australian child sex abuse inquiry chief …

AUSTRALIA
Washington Post

Australian child sex abuse inquiry chief says more than 5,000 victims likely to testify

By Associated Press

Updated: Wednesday, April 3

MELBOURNE, Australia — The head of an Australia-wide commission looking into allegations of child sex abuse in state and religious institutions as well as community groups said more than 5,000 victims are likely to give evidence of their harrowing experiences.

Justice Pete McClellan chairs a bench of six commissioners who on Wednesday started a powerful government-appointed inquiry known in Australia as a Royal Commission. Witnesses can be compelled to testify and risk imprisonment for lying.

The inquiry was unlikely to achieve its deadline set by the government of late 2015 because so many people wanted to give evidence, he said.

McClellan said he expected at least 5,000 people will want to give evidence, but the actual number could be much higher.

“The task we have is large; the issues are complex,” McClellan said.

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April 2, 2013

Imam arrested in Toronto for crimes in the US

CANADA/UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Barbara Dorris on April 02, 2013

Yesterday, a day after being acquitted of charges in Canada, police in Toronto arrested Mohammad Masroor for extradition to the US in the case of a Muslim cleric who is also accused of molesting in Michigan and Florida.

We are grateful to Toronto police for arresting this Imam before he could flee to a country where he could avoid extradition to the US. It is important that he face trial for the alleged abuse that allegedly occurred in Michigan and Florida. We hope that this arrest will bring hope to the children who have been victimized by him.

Given the history of allegations against Masroor and the multitude of countries to which he has ties, we believe that there are likely other victims out there suffering in silence. We urge anyone who may have seen or suspected crimes by Masroor or any other Imam will come forward and make a report to police.

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DreamWorks, Participant Pick Up Church Sex Abuse Scandal Film (Exclusive)

UNITED STATES
Hollywood Reporter

Tom McCarthy has signed on to direct and co-write the script with Josh Singer.

In a move certain to spark controversy, DreamWorks Studios and Participant Media have acquired film rights to the story of the Catholic Church’s decades-long cover-up of its pedophile priests in Massachusetts as uncovered during a yearlong investigation by the Boston Globe.

Tom McCarthy (The Visitor) has signed on to direct and co-write the script with Josh Singer (the upcoming WikiLeaks movie The Fifth Estate).

Anonymous Content’s Michael Sugar and Steve Golin and Rocklin/Faust’s Nicole Rocklin and Blye Faust will produce. David Mizner, who brought the project to the producers, will serve as a consultant and associate producer. Participant’s Jonathan King and Jeff Skoll will serve as executive producers.

Life rights have been acquired to the Boston Globe’s “Spotlight Team” of reporters and editors, including then-Globe editor Marty Baron, special projects editor Ben Bradlee Jr., Spotlight Team editor Walter “Robby” Robinson and reporters Michael Rezendes, Sacha Pfeiffer and Matt Carroll.

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Man sues archdiocese, alleging sex abuse by priest

NEW MEXICO
The New Mexican

By Tom Sharpe
The New Mexican

An anonymous Taos County man alleges in a lawsuit that he was molested as a child by a priest in Questa some 25 years ago.

He claims the Rev. Michael O’Brien raped him, beginning when he was 10 or 11 years old and continuing until he was 12 or 13.

O’Brien was known for starting the Pilgrimage for Vocations while he was a pastor in Estancia in 1973. The 100-mile walk from Estancia to Chimayó was meant to recruit young men to the priesthood.

He went on to serve at the San Francisco de Asis Catholic Church in Ranchos de Taos from from 1980 to 1981, at St. Gertrude the Great in Mora, 1982-84, Our Lady of Sorrows in Las Vegas, N.M., 1985-86, and St. Anthony in Questa, 1987-89.

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And on the first day of Child Abuse Prevention Month, this happened …

OREGON
Statesman Journal

Here is a draft of our Wednesday editorial:

On Monday, the first day of National Child Abuse Prevention Month, a Woodburn priest pleaded guilty and was sent to prison for six-plus years for molesting a boy.

What Angel Armando Perez did was awful. His is the type of story that often makes the news, sometimes with a worse ending. In this case, the 12-year-old boy ran for help when he awoke to find Perez touching him inappropriately.

Many abusers are people like Perez — people in authority, people who would never be suspected, people who choose victims whom they think would stay silent about the abuse.

However, Angel Armando Perez is not the typical or most common child abuser in the Mid-Valley. That is the parent who neglects his or her children, often because the parent is hooked on drugs or alcohol.

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Questa man claims sexual abuse, sues Archdiocese of Santa Fe

NEW MEXICO
KOB

[with video]

A 37 year old man from Questa says he was sexually abused by his parish priest when he was a boy back in the 1980s. Now he’s suing the Archdiocese of Santa Fe for damages.

He’s known as “John Doe” in the lawsuit filed Tuesday in Albuquerque. The idea is that the archdiocese failed to screen, train or supervise Father Michael O’Brien, a priest the lawyers believe is now dead.

John Doe says he was an altar boy at St. Anthony church in Questa. He says he was about ten or eleven years old when Father O’Brien escalated from back rubs to criminal sexual contact and penetration.

Doe’s lawyer, Brad Hall of Albuquerque, says the lawsuit is part of the healing process for his client.

“I believe this is one of those cases,” Hall said. “I don’t think he’s motivated by verdicts or dollars. He truly has been in dire straits psychologically as he has come to grips with this.”

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Archdiocese named in sex-abuse lawsuit

NEW MEXICO
KRQE

Updated: Tuesday, 02 Apr 2013

Kim Vallez

ALBUQUERQUE (KRQE) – A New Mexico man has filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe alleging he was sexually abused by a priest when he was an altar boy at St. Anthony’s Catholic Church in Questa.

In the lawsuit the man identified only as John Doe names Father Michael O’Brien as the man alleged to have abused him.

He claims Father Mike started with hugs, soon was massaging the boy and then moved on to rape.

The man claims the incidents happened over a two-year period when he was about 10 or 11 years old, but he didn’t reveal the alleged incidents until 2012.

Attorney Brad Hall, who is representing the man, says he went to the archdiocese first for help. They offered him counseling with the condition that he could not contact any attorneys or file a lawsuit.

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BREAKING: New lawsuit alleges 1980s Questa priest was pedophile

NEW MEXICO
ABQ Journal

By Mark Oswald / Journal Staff Writer
on Tue, Apr 2, 2013

A new lawsuit has been filed in state District Court alleging that a Roman Catholic parish priest in Questa sexually abused a 10-year-old or 11-year-old boy repeatedly over a period of a year and half in the 1980s.

The suit alleges that the Rev. Michael O’Brien abused the boy while assigned to St. Anthony Parish in Questa, north of Taos, where the victim’s parents wanted him to be an altar boy and the priest was known as “Father Mike.” The Archdiocese of Santa Fe and St. Anthony Parish are named as defendants.

Efforts by a Journal reporter to reach an archdiocese spokeswoman for comment today were not immediately successful.

The lawsuit says the victim of O’Brien’s “many counts of criminal sexual contact and penetration” went to the archdiocese in 2012, “seeking help.” The suit alleges he was told the archdiocese would pay for counseling for him “as long as he did not talk to a lawyer or bring a claim.”

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St. Paul dad pleads not guilty to pointing AK-47 at daughter for not getting A’s

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JOY POWELL , Star Tribune
Updated: April 2, 2013

A 52-year-old Russian Orthodox priest rejected a plea deal on charges that he pointed an assault rifle at his wife and teen daughter over the girl’s failure to get straight A’s.

A Russian Orthodox priest rejected a plea deal on Tuesday in St. Paul and is headed to trial for allegedly pointing an AK-47 assault rifle at his wife and teen daughter because the girl got two B’s in school.

Kiril Bartashevitch, 52, pleaded not guilty to two felony counts of terroristic threats after allegedly point the rifle at the mother and daughter during a dispute on Jan. 13, according to a criminal complaint filed in Ramsey County District Court.

Bartashevitch fired no shots, but he threw his wife to the floor when she tried to protect her daughter, the complaint says.

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Priest convicted of rape loses appeal

NEW YORK/MASSACHUSETTS
Albany Times Union

By Brendan J. Lyons

Published 5:38 pm, Tuesday, April 2, 2013

A Massachusetts appellate court on Tuesday rejected the appeal of a former Albany Roman Catholic Diocese priest who was convicted of raping altar boys during trips to Berkshire County in the 1980s.

Gary Mercure, 65, was sentenced to more than 20 years in prison for his 2011 conviction on charges he raped two boys that he drove to Massachusetts on hiking and skiing trips. The victims were altar boys for Mercure at Our Lady of Annunciation parish in Warren County.

In his appeal, Mercure’s attorney argued that the trial judge should not have allowed the jury to hear testimony about uncharged sex crimes from the two victims raped in Massachusetts, as well as from four other alleged victims who testified about incidents of sexual abuse by Mercure between 1981 and 1993. The uncharged crimes took place in New York, where the statute of limitations time-barred any prosecution.

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Suspended Conn. priest admits to meth charge

CONNECTICUT
News 12

Updated: April 2, 2013
By The Associated Press DAVE COLLINS

HARTFORD, Conn. – (AP) — A suspended Roman Catholic priest accused of making more than $300,000 in methamphetamine sales out of his Connecticut apartment while running an adult video and sex toy shop pleaded guilty Tuesday to a federal drug charge.

Kevin Wallin, 61, of Waterbury, admitted to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute methamphetamine and was scheduled to be sentenced June 25. The prosecution and defense agreed on a sentence of 11 to 14 years in prison.

Prosecutors said the 61-year-old Wallin had meth mailed to him from co-conspirators in California and sold the drugs out of his Waterbury apartment last year. He also bought an adult video and sex toy shop in North Haven named Land of Oz & Dorothy’s Place, apparently to launder the drug money, authorities said.

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Franklin County Man Indicted for Sexual Assault

ALABAMA
WZDX

FRANKLIN COUNTY, Ala. (WZDX) – A Franklin County grand jury indicted a Spruce Pine man for sexually assaulting a child.

Freddy Hovater was indicted during a March grand jury session on charges of first degree sexual abuse and sexual torture of a child under 12.

Hovater was arrested in October. Investigators said he sexually assaulted a child with a vibrator and the wooden handle of a bell. He also is accused of watching the child take a bath.

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Former Franklin County Pastor Charged With Sexual Torture, Abuse

ALABAMA
WHNT

April 2, 2013, by Carter Watkins and Melissa Payne

FRANKLIN COUNTY, Ala. (WHNT) – A former pastor in Franklin County is charged with sexual torture and abuse.

Freddy Hovater, 72, was arrested on October 1, 2012 and a grand jury just indicted him on the charges.

Sheriff Shannon Oliver says the abuse happened for nearly a year inside Hovater’s home in Spruce Pine. The victim was an 8-year-old girl. Her family attended Hovater’s church.

Sheriff Oliver did not say which church Hovater used to lead.

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Kirche meldet weniger Missbrauchsfälle

DEUTSCHLAND
Schwabische

Bamberg / lby In Bayern zeichnet sich ein Rückgang der Verdachtsfälle von sexuellem Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche ab. Im vergangenen Jahr gingen bei der Missbrauchsbeauftragen des Erzbistums Bamberg, der Anwältin Eva Hastenteufel-Knörr, sieben neue Vorwürfe ein. Im Jahr zuvor seien noch zwölf Fälle aktenkundig geworden, sagte ein Sprecher der Erzdiözese.

Auch im Bistum Augsburg nahmen die Meldungen von sexuellem Missbrauch durch Geistliche oder Mitarbeiter der Diözese im vergangenen Jahr deutlich ab: Es gingen 14 Hinweise ein, im Jahr 2011 waren es nach Angaben des Missbrauchsbeauftragten mit 30 Fällen mehr als doppelt so viele. Zugenommen haben aber 2012 die Meldungen von körperlicher Gewalt von 4 auf 16. Seit 2010 wurden in dem Bistum insgesamt 148 sexuelle oder gewalttätige Übergriffe registriert. Zu zwei Dritteln handelte es sich dabei um sexuellen Missbrauch, zum größten Teil fanden diese Taten vor 1980 statt.

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Kirchenmusiker gesteht im Verfahren wegen Kindesmissbrauchs

DEUTSCHLAND
Kreiszeitung

Oldenburg/Hannover/Osnabrück – Immer neue Missbrauchsfälle in der Kirche schockierten die Bürger in den vergangenen Jahren. Jetzt steht ein ehemaliger Kirchenmusiker deswegen vor Gericht. Die Kirchen haben das heikle Thema nach eigenen Angaben inzwischen im Griff.

Im Prozess wegen 23-fachen Kindesmissbrauchs hat ein ehemaliger Kirchenmusiker am Dienstag vor dem Landgericht Oldenburg zum Auftakt ein Geständnis abgelegt. Auf Antrag der Verteidigung schloss das Gericht dazu aber die Öffentlichkeit aus und begründete die Entscheidung mit dem Schutz der Intimsphäre von Opfern und Angeklagtem.

Die Staatsanwaltschaft wirft dem Verwaltungsangestellten vor, in 23 Fällen von Anfang 2011 bis März 2012 mehrere Kinder sexuell missbraucht zu haben. In den vier schwersten Fällen gehe es um beischlafähnliche Taten. Der Strafrahmen dafür liegt nach Angaben von Gerichtssprecher Michael Herrmann bei 2 bis 15 Jahren Haft.

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McCort: Rumors of firings untrue

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Dave Sutor dsutor@tribdem.com

JOHNSTOWN — A Bishop McCort Catholic High School spokesman on Monday dispelled widely circulating rumors about multiple teachers being fired from the academic institution.

Matt Beynon called the speculation “unfounded.”

He elaborated by saying, “That is not an accurate description of any events that have occurred.”

Rumors began circulating in the afternoon that anywhere between five and nine teachers had been fired from a staff of slightly more than three dozen instructors.

“No one was let go,” Beynon emphasized.

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St. Paul dad who allegedly aimed gun at daughter is respected priest, supporters say

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.comtwincities.com
Posted: 04/02/2013

Kirill Bartashevitch, the St. Paul man who allegedly pointed an AK-47 at his 15-year-old daughter in a dispute over her getting B’s instead of A’s in school, is a highly respected Russian Orthodox priest who should be treated with leniency.

That’s the message from at least 20 supporters throughout the world, including people in Russia, Canada, New York and Ohio, who wrote to Judge Lezlie Ott Marek on his behalf.

The writers describe Bartashevitch as a deeply religious man who expresses great care and compassion for others, helping them grow in the faith. Some said they did not believe reports of the charges.

Bartashevitch appeared in Ramsey County District Court Tuesday, April 2, initially asking for another continuance in his case so that he could deal with potential “immigration consequences that are quite significant,” said his attorney, Cullin Smith. Smith did not elaborate. Bartashevitch then changed his mind. Judge Joy Bartscher set a pretrial date of May 1.

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Commission not coping with number of victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

The Royal Commission into the abuse of children which is due to start in Melbourne tomorrow , is having trouble dealing with the number of people who want to give evidence.

Transcript

STEVE CANNANE, PRESENTER: THE HIGHLY ANTICIPATED ROYAL COMMISSION INTO THE ABUSE OF CHILDREN GETS UNDERWAY IN MELBOURNE TOMORROW.

MANY HOPE THE SCALE OF ABUSE WILL BE REVEALED.

THERE ARE ALREADY CLAIMS THOUGH THAT THE COMMISSION ISN’T COPING WITH PEOPLE CONTACTING OT TO GIVE EVIDENCE

HAMISH FITZSIMMONS REPORTS

HAMISH FITZSIMMONS, REPORTER: With the opening statements now only hours away, the royal commission carries the hopes of many.

STEPHEN WOODS, ABUSE SURVIVOR: I really want to see this royal commission being used for what it should be and that’s to heal so much of Australia.

HAMISH FITZSIMMONS: Stephen Woods and two of his siblings were sexually assaulted over years at schools in Ballarat. He says the royal commission has encouraged many victims to speak for the first time.

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Healing broken souls

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

April 3, 2013

Barney Zwartz

The stakes, and the expectations, are high for the royal commission into child sexual abuse, which begins today.

After decades of desperate struggle to have the world take them seriously, survivors of child sexual abuse by clergy are beginning to live, in the words of survivor and advocate Peter Blenkiron, in a fragile ”bubble of hope”.

Blenkiron is the spokesman for a group of about 40 survivors in Ballarat, a city where another 40 or so victims have already taken their own lives. What has given them this cautious sliver of optimism is being heard by people who can change things.

Since November the Victorian government has been running an inquiry that has given many victims a voice. In NSW, one inquiry has recently examined church behaviour about abuse complaints and another will start in May. The most important – the long-sought royal commission – begins in Melbourne on Wednesday.

Although many survivors recover to lead fulfilling lives, many others are walking a tightrope just to get through each day, their potential paralysed and hopes stolen because of events decades earlier, events that were beyond their control. ”The abusers are soul destroyers,” one victim said recently.

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Abuse royal commission holds 1st sitting

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The royal commission into institutional sexual abuse begins today.

It’ll hold its first sitting in Melbourne, but the flood of victims’ stories will have to wait because no evidence will be tendered.

Instead, chair Justice Peter McClellan will outline how the commission will conduct its hearings and counsel assisting the commission Gail Furness SC will make an opening statement.

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Sex abuse royal commission to begin

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video and audio]

The historic Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will begin in the Victorian County Court in Melbourne today.

The commission will look at religious organisations, state care providers, not-for-profit bodies, as well as child service agencies and police forces and what can be done so that the victims have justice.

The commission’s chairman, Justice Peter McClellan, will today provide information on how future private and public hearings will be conducted.

The senior counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness, will also deliver an opening statement.

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Child abuse victims to have free legal advice for Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

TONY EASTLEY: The full cost of the Royal Commission is yet to be revealed and it will be determined in part by the length of the inquiry.

The Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus has announced that child abuse victims giving evidence will have access to a free legal advice service.

It will help people put together submissions to the Royal Commission and provide advice on the options they may have to pursue civil or criminal action.

Mark Dreyfus spoke to Anna Henderson after last night’s Cabinet meeting in Canberra.

MARK DREYFUS: This is a very, very large royal commission and its exact scale is going to start to become clear when the commission holds its first hearing in Melbourne.

ANNA HENDERSON: What is the significance of providing free legal advisory services for people who are engaging with the Royal Commission?

MARK DREYFUS: It’s going to be there to provide people with legal and procedural advice on important issues such as how they go about preparing a submission to the Royal Commission, how they give evidence, what ways they can participate in the hearings.

As well, this free legal advisory service is going to make sure that people have advice on their legal options – not just how they can engage with the Royal Commission but civil law options, criminal law options and of course giving them face-to-face advice, a bit like a duty lawyer, if they are appearing in the Royal Commission.

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Royal commission into child sex abuse begins today

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Taylor Auerbach
Herald Sun
April 03, 2013

AUSTRALIA’S historic royal commission into child abuse begins in Melbourne today, supported by a formidable female legal duo.

The Federal Government has announced that NSW barrister Gail Furness SC and Victorian Melinda Richards will be counsel assisting the royal commission.

The pair has been recruited to investigate how institutions with a responsibility for children, including the Catholic Church, have reacted to and managed allegations of child sex abuse within their walls.

The royal commission will investigate where systems have failed child victims and make recommendations about how to prevent further abuse.

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Free legal advice for royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Victims of clergy sex abuse will be given free legal advice to help them participate in the royal commission, which starts in Melbourne on Wednesday.

During the commission’s first sitting, chairman Justice Peter McClellan will outline how the national body will operate and counsel assisting the commission Gail Furness, SC, will make an opening statement.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus says the free legal service will provide victims with advice ‘a bit like a duty lawyer’.

‘It’s going to be there to provide people with legal and procedural advice on important issues,’ he told ABC Radio on Wednesday, citing examples such as how they go about preparing a submission, how they give evidence and what ways they can participate in the hearings.

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Lawyers appointed to steer abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

by:Stuart Rintoul
From:The Australian
April 03, 2013

THE federal government has appointed two lawyers, Gail Furness and Melinda Richards, to steer the direction of the child sexual abuse royal commission.

The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will hold its first hearing in Melbourne’s County Court today.

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Hollywood studio secures film rights to Boston clergy abuse investigation

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Sr. Rose Pacatte | Apr. 2, 2013

The Hollywood Reporter announced Tuesday that Dreamworks and Participant Media have obtained the rights to the Boston Globe’s yearlong investigation of clergy sex abuse in Massachusetts.

The investigation by the Globe’s “Spotlight Team” of reporters and editors led to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law, the former archbishop of Boston. The 2002 revelations have had worldwide repercussions for the Catholic church that continue today in terms of allegations, settlements and pastoral policy.

The Globe won a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for its coverage of the scandal in 2003.

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AUS- Royal Commission announces new provision for legal advice, SNAP responds

AUSTRALIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Nicky Davis on April 02, 2013

SNAP Australia welcomes the announcement of the provision of basic legal advice to those wishing to provide evidence to the Royal Commission.

We hope this service will be made available to whistleblowers and witnesses as well as to victims themselves, and that anyone providing this service will first be required to undergo training for dealing with those affected by complex trauma.

In addition to legal advice, victims desperately need access to free counselling to help with preparing their submissions. The Royal Commission will expose vulnerable victims to the emotional roller coaster of being heard, believed and supported for the first time in their lives, while also reliving horribly traumatic experiences. To ask these innocent victims, whose needs have been ignored and neglected for their entire lives, to find the courage to do this without vital support would be heartless indeed and detrimental to efforts to discover the truth.

It is also extremely important that the Commission not expose victims to service providers, Commission staff or even Commissioners with strong, high level ties to the institution which enabled and covered up their abuse. Those with ties to the Catholic Church should not hear evidence from or provide support to Catholic victims, those with strong ties to the Scout movement, state institutions, the Salvation Army, the Jewish Community etc should be kept away from dealing with victims of those institutions. Neither should Bob Atkinson, a former Queensland Police Commissioner, hear any matters involving Queensland Police investigations.

While a legal and technical process, it is important to remember this Royal Commission is about Australian children who were targeted, preyed upon, and exploited by those in positions of absolute power over them, then betrayed and abandoned by church officials and other institutions, to suffer in lonely silence for decades, cruelly denied the help that would have relieved our suffering.

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OPINION: Sex abuse survivors want to be believed

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By Bob O’Toole and Lindsay Gardiner
April 2, 2013

Why didn’t the victims say something years ago?

In most situations, children are groomed for sexual abuse by the perpetrating priest, brother, teacher etc over a period of years.

Their family is also groomed by the perpetrator, who becomes a close and trusted family friend and, sometimes, a spiritual adviser and confidant. The family feel great pride at the special attention they are being paid.

The perpetrator has spent years building a trusted and respected community profile. He makes the child believe the child has invited the abuse and enjoyed the relationship.

At first, the child enjoyed being special to someone so important.

The perpetrator tells the child no one will believe the story of abuse or he tells them something bad will happen to those he or she loves if the child speaks up.

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Catholic Church Abuse Scandal Getting Movie: DreamWorks Acquires Rights to Boston Globe Story

UNITED STATES
Moviefone

It’s been more than 10 years since the Boston Globe first reported the decades-long sexual abuse — and subsequent cover-up — plaguing the Massachusetts Catholic Church, setting in motion revelations of similar abuse in the Catholic Church worldwide. Now, the story behind how that abuse was uncovered is set to be told on the big screen, with DreamWorks Studio and Participant Media announcing that they’ve acquired the film rights to the Globe’s reporting.

The paper spent a year investigating abuse allegations, interviewing victims, and reviewing thousands of pages of documents, ultimately revealing that church leadership had made a concerted effort to ignore and in many cases cover-up reported abuse. One accused priest was shuttled from parish to parish, despite the church’s awareness of his record.

The scandal rocked the church on both a national and worldwide level, leading to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law, who had a hand in hiding priests’ serial abuse. Abuse allegations are still rampant today, and DreamWorks executive vice president Jonathan King said the film would capture “a powerful and still-evolving story.”

Members of the Globe’s Spotlight Team — reporters and editors who worked together to investigate and break the story — who will be featured in the film include then-Globe editor Marty Baron, special projects editor Ben Bradlee Jr., Spotlight Team editor Walter “Robby” Robinson, and reporters Michael Rezendes, Sacha Pfeiffer, and Matt Carroll. The team won a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2003 for their reporting.

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DreamWorks, Participant Board Catholic Sex Scandal Project

UNITED STATES
Variety

Dave McNary
Film Reporter@Variety_DMcNary

DreamWorks Studios and Participant Media have joined the untitled feature about the Catholic Church’s cover-up of its pedophile priests in Massachusetts, uncovered by the Boston Globe.

Variety reported in October that “Win Win” helmer Tom McCarthy and scribe Josh Singer (“The West Wing”) had been tapped by Anonymous Content and Rocklin/Faust to work on the project, which follows the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists who exposed the scandal. At that point, McCarthy had been working in secret for more than a year on the movie.

Steve Golin and Michael Sugar of Anonymous Content are producing with Nicole Rocklin and Blye Faust. David Mizner, who brought the project to Rocklin/Faust, will consult and serve as an associate producer.

Participant’s Jonathan King and Jeff Skoll will exec produce.

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DreamWorks acquires film rights to Globe series on Clergy abuse scandal

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

April 02, 2013

DreamWorks Studios and Participant Media have acquired the film rights to the story of the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal in Massachusetts, DreamWorks president of production Holly Bario announced Tuesday. The movie based on the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series of stories will be directed by Tom McCarthy, a BC grad whose credits include “The Station Agent,” with a screenplay by Josh Singer. “The Boston Globe’s coverage of the Catholic priest scandal opened the door to a bigger story that had worldwide ramifications,” Bario said in a statement Tuesday. “The story of how this team of editors and reporters came to uncover the truth will make a dramatic and compelling film, especially with the talents of our director Tom McCarthy and his co-screenwriter Josh Singer on board.”

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Dreamworks to make film of Globe’s expose on Catholic Church scandal

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Times

By Nicole Sperling
April 2, 2013

Looks like the Boston Globe’s yearlong investigation into the Catholic Church’s coverup of its pedophile priests in Massachusetts will be turned into a feature film.

Dreamworks Studios and Participant Media announced Tuesday that they have acquired the life rights to the Boston Globe’s “Spotlight Team” of reporters and editors who spent a year interviewing victims and reviewing thousands of pages of documents, discovering years of coverup by Catholic Church leadership.

Their reporting lead to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law and led to other unveilings of church coverups around the world. It also earned the team a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2003.

Tom McCarthy (“Win Win”) has signed on to direct and co-write the script with Josh Singer, who most recently wrote the Wikileaks drama “The Fifth Estate” for Dreamworks and director Bill Condon.

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DreamWorks acquires Catholic priest sex scandal movie

UNITED STATES
Inside Movies

by Hillary Busis

In 2001, reporters at the Boston Globe began investigating and reporting on the Catholic Church’s history of covering up sexual abuse perpetrated by priests in Massachusetts. Their tireless work earned the paper a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2003 — and ten years later, the rights to their story have been acquired by DreamWorks Studios and Participant Media.

Win Win director (and Boston University graduate) Tom McCarthy has signed on to direct the movie; he’ll also co-write the script with Josh Singer, a veteran TV writer who also penned DreamWorks’s upcoming Wikileaks drama The Fifth Estate. This will be the sixth collaboration for Participant and DreamWorks; the companies have previously partnered on The Fifth Estate, Lincoln, The Help, The Kite Runner, and The Soloist.

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Cypress youth pastor sentenced to 5 years for sexual assault of a child

TEXAS
Your Houston News

Posted: Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Staff Report

A Cypress youth pastor has been sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to sexual assault of a child and online solicitation of a minor.

The 16-year-old girl met Chad Foster, 34, in the summer of 2011 while he was serving as a youth pastor at the Community of Faith Church on Becker Road in Cypress. Court documents show that the two communicated frequently through texts, but the relationship turned sexual in July when the girl visited Foster at his home. From July to mid-October, the two had sex at least half a dozen times, records state.

Foster reportedly told the girl several times not to tell anyone about their relationship because he would get in trouble for their age difference, according to court documents.

When the girl started to feel bad about the relationship, she told her Spanish teacher at Cy-Woods High School and an associate pastor at the Community of Faith Church about the relationship on Oct. 27, who then reported the relationship to the Harris County Sheriff’s Office.

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Youth pastor sentenced to 5 years for sexual assault of a child

TEXAS
KHOU

by KHOU.com staff
khou.com

Posted on April 1, 2013

CYPRESS, Texas – A former youth pastor, who pleaded guilty to raping a 16-year-old girl in 2011 and soliciting another teen online, was sentenced to five years in prison on Monday.

Chad Foster’s sentencing came after hearing testimony from his victims in front of family members, many of whom were in tears.

“It’s hard to think of any child being victimized that way, but to have it done by a youth pastor at church where they’re supposed to be safe, I think, is just extra repugnant,” Lacy Johnson, assistant district attorney, said.

The girl who Foster seduced and had sex with testified that she felt “used and cheated.” She added that she had lost her faith in God.

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Priest Pleads Guilty For Role In Meth Ring

CONNECTICUT
The Hartford Courant

By EDMUND H. MAHONY, emahony@courant.com
The Hartford Courant
11:24 a.m. EDT, April 2, 2013

HARTFORD -—

A suspended Catholic priest from Bridgeport pleaded guilty Tuesday to participating in a bi-coastal methamphetamine distribution ring.

Monsignor Kevin Wallin, 61, faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years in prison when he is sentenced in June. The sentencing guideline is 135-168 months. He entered his plea in front of Senior Judge Alfred V. Covello in U.S. District Court.

Wallin faced a single charge of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute the powerful stimulate methamphetamine.

The indictment of Wallin on narcotics charges in January stunned the Diocese of Bridgeport, where he formerly served in positions that included personal secretary to successive bishops, including Edward Egan, later appointed a cardinal.

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BREAKING: Limerick priest steps aside after ‘child protection’ allegation

IRELAND
Limerick Leader

Published on 02/04/2013

A WELL known Limerick priest has stepped aside from his ministry while an alleged incident of a sexual nature, officially described as a ‘historical child protection matter’, is dealt with by the Diocese of Limerick.

The priest is currently based in county Limerick but was in a parish in the city when the alleged incident occurred in the mid-1990s.

Gardai are aware of the allegation but it is unclear at the moment whether they are investigating a formal complaint.

“The Diocese of Limerick can confirm that a priest of the diocese, in accordance with the recommendations of Church policy on safeguarding children, has asked to step aside from ministry while an alleged historical child protection matter is being dealt with,” said a spokesperson in the statement.

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Cardinal Pell to give evidence at child abuse inquiry as Catholic Church plans chan

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

Carly Crawford
Herald Sun
April 01, 2013

CARDINAL George Pell will appear at the Victorian inquiry into child abuse within weeks, as the Catholic Church proposes a new system for handling abuse complaints.

Cardinal Pell introduced Melbourne’s controversial complaints handling system when he was Archbishop of Melbourne in the 1990s. The church confirmed Cardinal Pell would appear before the panel in coming weeks.

“The committee has indicated some interest in Cardinal Pell attending and he’s certainly willing to co-operate with that,” church spokesman Shane Mackinlay said.

Church figures will propose changes to its complaints process, which has attracted criticism for keeping abuse allegations in-house and making victims feel that they could not report their abuse to police.

In Victoria, the Catholic Church will propose having the Ombudsman review its abuse investigations. And it will suggest changing the Crimes Act so that the church can routinely report abuse complaints to police without identifying victims.

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AUS – SNAP looks forward to the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by Nicky Davis on April 02, 2013

As the royal commission begins we stand full of gratitude and hope, gratitude to the Prime Minister and those in the government who have made this possible and hope that children of Australia will be safe as a result.

We seek the full truth and want complete transparency. The response should be compassionate toward the wounded and stinging for the predators and their enablers.

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Priest turns rapist, then sells victim for R 40,000 to 3 brothers

INDIA
Daily Bhaskar

Chhatarpur: A priest, his partner and three brothers were booked for allegedly raping a woman, the Madhya Pradesh police said on Tuesday.

According to reports, the woman (33) was kidnapped by the temple priest on January 17. After allegedly raping her, the accused priest sold her for Rs 40,000 to three brothers who also raped her repeatedly.

The incident came to light when the victim’s brother traced her along with a child in Pipra village of Tikamgarh district in Madhya Pradesh.

Later, the victim and her brother filed a complaint against all the accused. No arrests have been made so far. The police is investigating the matter.

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INSIGHT-Pope to review Vatican bureaucracy, scandal-ridden bank

VATICAN CITY
Trust Law

Tue, 2 Apr 2013

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY, April 2 (Reuters) – Pope Francis, who has said he wants the Catholic Church to be a model of austerity and honesty, could restructure or even close the Vatican’s scandal-ridden bank as part of a broad review of its troubled bureaucracy, Vatican sources say.

Francis, who inherited a Church mired in scandals over priests’ sexual abuse of children and the leak of confidential documents alleging corruption and infighting in the Vatican’s central administration, is mulling his options as he sets the tone for a reformed and humbler Holy See.

One of the tests of his papacy will be what he does about the bank which has regularly damaged the Vatican’s image over three decades and faces growing calls for reform.

Last year a European anti-money laundering body found that the bank – formally called the Institute for Works of Religion and known by the Italian acronym IOR – had failed to meet some of its standards on fighting financial crimes.

“Certainly if the pope wants to, he can close the IOR,” said a senior Vatican official, a prelate who had years of experience of directly dealing with the bank. The future of the IOR was one of main issues Francis would have to confront now that the whirlwind of his surprise election was slowing, he said.

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MORE THAN 400 MAGDALENE WOMAN SEEK COMPENSATION

IRELAND
Galway Bay FM

More than 400 women who worked in Magdalene laundries, including the one based at Forster Street in the city, have applied for state compensation.

Since a Department of Justice helpline was set up last month more than 1,100 calls have been received, according to today’s Irish Independent.

424 women have registered their interest in being included in receiving benefits from the state compensation fund.

The women were asked to give details of which laundry they were resident in, the dates they were there, and whether they have any records to support their application.

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Perlitz sex abuse lawsuits move forward

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

Michael P. Mayko

Updated 8:40 am, Tuesday, April 2, 2013

HARTFORD — Charges of widespread sexual abuse by the director of a program funded by wealthy area Catholics and created to help abandoned Haitian boys appears headed to trial.

U.S. District Judge Robert Chatigny, who is presiding over the 22 cases each seeking more than $20 million, began clearing the way for trial by dismissing several of the charges while allowing others including the negligent supervision of Douglas Perlitz to stand. No date has been set for the trial as of Tuesday.

Perlitz, a Fairfield University graduate whose work in Haiti garnered him national attention, is serving a 19-year, seven-month federal prison term after he pleaded guilty to traveling overseas to engage in sex with a minor. During his sentencing he admitted there were several victims.

Shortly after Perlitz’s sentencing, 23 of those victims permitted Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston lawyer who has won millions suing Catholic priests and their Dioceses on sexual abuse charges, to pick up their cause. In the suits, Garabedian named the Rev. Paul Carrier, a former chaplain at Fairfield University and Perlitz’s mentor; Fairfield University and the Society of Jesus New England, Carrier’s order as defendants for being negligent in their supervision of the program. He also sued Hope Carter, a New Canaan philanthropist; the Order of Malta, American Association, which provided the 1997 start-up grant to Perlitz and the Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem of Rhodes along with 15 others on similar negligence charges. Carter and Carrier also were directors of the Haiti Fund, a nonprofit organization that raised money for Perlitz’s programs. Each suit seeks $20 million in damages from each defendant.

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Free service to aid abuse commission

AUSTRALIA
Canberra Times

April 3, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

Victims of clergy child-sex abuse and others will be given free legal advice so they can engage with the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which holds its first hearing on Wednesday in Melbourne.

Federal Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus said the free service would give legal, advice including help with submissions and advice on confidentiality agreements.

The announcement came as Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Catholic Church’s Truth, Justice and Healing Council, named the council’s 12 members and told Fairfax Media that the council was already providing documents and files to the commission.

Mr Dreyfus said legal advice would be offered through the National Association of Community Legal Centres on a free nationwide telephone service, with some face-to-face help available in some locations yet to be identified.

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If Catholic bishops can criticise government, why can’t priests criticise the church?

UGANDA
Daily Monitor

By Ladislaus K. Rwakafuuzi

Posted Monday, April 1 2013

When a bird perches off its nest without a word, it must only be too young. I will not fail to say something about Fr Anthony Musaala’s saga because I am neither too young to speak nor am I too daft to fathom the preponderance and momentousness of his dossier.

Fr Musaala has said that the Catholic Church should re-examine celibacy for its priests. Musaala has reasoned that many otherwise good priests fail in their vows of celibacy. What Musaala is raising here is not new. That debate is as old as the date the church decided on celibacy.

Celibacy was not a precept for priests in the beginnings of the church. The church later mooted celibacy as a means of serving God better without family distractions. The same church has the power to reverse itself on this precept if it sees that priests are no longer serving better when celibate. So Musaala has proposed that celibacy may be made optional. This is one arm of Musaala’s arguments.

The second arm is that the church should not merely watch when some of its priests who have failed to be celibate cause harm. Musaala is proposing that the church should strictly discipline the priests whose failure in celibacy causes harm to third parties, especially the children.

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Justice for Magdalenes publishes Survivor Guide to Magdalen Commission

IRELAND
Justice for Magdalenes

Justice for Magdalenes (JFM), the survivor advocacy group, has published a guide, entitled Survivor Guide to Magdalen Commission,for women who were incarcerated in the Magdalene Laundries as they prepare to engage with the Magdalen Fund.

Following the official State apology issued by An Taoiseach Enda Kenny on 19th February 2013, the government asked Justice John Quirke to undertake a three-month review and make recommendations to the Government about the criteria for applying to the Magdalen Fund for payments and other supports.

Survivors who have not already registered with the Magdalen Commissionare encouraged to do so. Registration forms are available from [click here]

The Survivor Guide to Magdalen Commission is intended solely as an aid to survivors; its purpose is to help them and their families to create a checklist of present-day needs. The Guide is not intended to supplant or replace any official documents created by the Magdalen Commission or the Irish State; it is offered simply as a guide to help women to prepare to engage with the process.

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Former Los Gatos Convent Employee to Be Sentenced For Fraud

CALIFORNIA
Patch

By Sheila Sanchez

April 1, 2013

A former lay employee of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary Catholic Convent in Los Gatos’ sentencing has been scheduled for 10 a.m. April 11 at the federal court building on South First Street in downtown San Jose.

The official pronouncement of the punishment against Linda Gomez, 67, originally scheduled for March 28, got postponed two weeks by U.S. District Judge D. Lowell Jensen.

Gomez, also known as Linda Surrett, pleaded guilty in October of 2012 to 17 counts of fraud after admitting having embezzled $100,000 from the religious order. A 2011 grand jury indictment included 14 counts of wire fraud and three counts of mail fraud against her.

The maximum statutory penalty for wire and mail fraud is 20 years in prison and a fine of $1 million, plus restitution, said U.S. Attorney Joseph Fazioli.

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Fr. Musaala commission set up

UGANDA
New Vision

Publish Date: Apr 02, 2013

By Taddeo Bwambale

The Catholic Church has set up a commission to investigate allegations by Fr Anthony Musaala that some priests had deviated from the oath of celibacy.

“We have set up a commission to look into the allegations by Fr Musaala. As to whether the allegations are correct or not, the commission will determine,” he said.

Addressing journalists at his residence in Rubaga on Saturday, the Archbishop of Kampala, Dr. Cyprian Kizito Lwanga said the commission would establish the truth.

The probe stems from a document purportedly authored by Musaala recently, claiming that many Catholic priests and bishops are sexually abusing minors, have mistresses and children who they are concealing or have abandoned

The letter also calls for a review of celibate chastity in the Catholic Church. Musaala has since acknowledged writing the document, but claims it leaked on the internet after he gave it to a fellow priest to edit it.

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Imam acquitted on sex charges re-arrested

CANADA
Toronto Sun

By Maryam Shah,Toronto Sun

First posted: Thursday, March 28, 2013

TORONTO – A day after being acquitted of sex-related charges, a former Toronto imam was arrested Wednesday for extradition to the United States.

Mohammad Masroor, 50, is wanted in Michigan and Florida on charges of criminal sexual contact with a person under 13, Toronto Police said.

“The offences are alleged to have occurred between 2000 and 2005,” police said Thursday.

Masroor was charged two years ago with sexually assaulting six people between November 2008 and July 2011. He was also charged with threatening death.

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Coleridge on truth council

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn

02 April 2013

The former Canberra and Goulburn archbishop Mark Coleridge has been appointed to the Truth Justice and Healing Council, which will manage the Catholic Church’s work with the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

Archbishop Coleridge, now the Archbishop of Brisbane, is one of 13 members announced by president of the Australian Catholic Bishops’ Conference Archbishop Denis Hart and chair of Catholic Religious Australia Sr Annette Cunliffe, RSC.

Prof Greg Craven, vice-chancellor of Australian Catholic University, is also on the council, which will be chaired by Justice Barry O’Keefe, a former chief judge of the NSW Supreme Court and once a commissioner on the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption.

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Quinn will announce Church to lose school control

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Katherine Donnelly Education Editor– 02 April 2013

THE Catholic Church is being told to hand over another 23 primary schools in an historic shake-up of the eduction system designed to offer parents more choice.

Department of Education surveys in 43 towns and suburbs over the past six months found that two-thirds of parents wanted a more diverse range of schools — meaning a reduction of the church’s overwhelming dominance of school patronage.

The results of the consultation with 10,000 parents on future control of local schools can be revealed today, with Education Minister Ruairi Quinn pointing out that a majority of areas surveyed had shown sufficient parental demand for wider choice of schools.

He insisted: “We cannot ignore this call for change.”

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Die hohen Erwartungen der Deutschen an Franziskus

DEUTSCHLAND
Die Welt

“Hofstaat-Gehabe”: Katholiken im ganzen Land legen ihre Zurückhaltung ab und diskutieren über einen radikalen Richtungswechsel im Vatikan. Die Hoffnungen sind groß. Das gefällt jedoch nicht allen. Von Gernot Facius

Kardinal Karl Lehmann (76) hat als rom-erfahrener Theologe ein sicheres Gespür für Veränderungen. Wo immer er in diesen Tagen hinkommt, sagt Lehmann: “Ich erwarte spannende Wochen.”

Die Veröffentlichung der Brandrede von Papst Franziskus (76) im Vorkonklave, in der der neue Mann auf dem Stuhl Petri alle Formen klerikaler Eitelkeit, die “Selbstbezogenheit” und den “theologischen Narzissmus” seiner Kirche geißelte, befeuert im deutschen Katholizismus die Diskussionen über einen möglichen radikalen Richtungswechsel im Vatikan.

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