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.

March 21, 2013

Fr. Musaala, man in eye of the storm

UGANDA
Daily Monitor

By Ivan Okuda

Posted Thursday, March 21 2013

The Rev. Fr. Anthony Musaala has been described by one journalist as, “jolly and social”, one man whose knack for speaking his mind can seldom go unnoticed.

It is a true statement. Only last year when former Forum for Democratic Change leader, Dr Kizza Besigye, was arrested at the height of the walk-to-work protests, he openly condemned the manner and spirit of the arrest.

Then, speaking to the press as an eye witness, he weighed in his opinion: “This is an infringement of people’s rights and of the rights of our brother. I am going to pray so that God intervenes … We should be ready to fight for our freedoms. Our government should understand that this country is for all of us.”

This, he said at the heat of the moment, when appearing to be siding with people that the State perceived as planning to make Uganda ungovernable, could easily come along with consequences. But speak his mind, he did.

It is, therefore, not surprising that the Father wrote a letter, titled ‘An open letter to bishops, priests and laity: The failure of celibate chastity among diocesan 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.

Bishop McCort scandal: Ex-female student alleges abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Kathy Mellott kmellott@tribdem.com

JOHNSTOWN — Another former student of Bishop McCort Catholic High School has stepped forward alleging sexual abuse at the hands of the late Brother Stephen Baker, according to an Altoona attorney representing this latest victim and several others.

This time, the alleged victim is a female, and attorney Richard Serbin anticipates more women will be stepping forward naming the Franciscan friar.

“This young lady says she knows there are others,” said Serbin, a sex abuse civil litigator.

Baker was 62 when he died in late January of a self-inflicted stab wound to the heart in his quarters at St. Bernardine Monastery just outside Hollidaysburg. He had been accused by more than 50 men of sexually molesting them while they were students at the Johnstown parochial high school.

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

Another claim filed in Baker case

PENNSYLVANIA
Altoona Mirror

March 21, 2013

A woman is the latest person to allege being sexually abused by Brother Stephen Baker while she was a student at Johnstown’s Bishop McCort High School.

Altoona attorney Richard M. Serbin said he has notified the diocese that he is representing a female who claims she began being sexually abused by the Franciscan friar when she was 15, while he served as an athletic trainer at Bishop McCort.

“Information has come to my attention which leads me to believe other female athletes and cheerleaders were also sexually abused by Brother Baker, in addition to the numerous male students who have already come forward to disclose they were victimized by this child predator,” Serbin said in a release.

He added, “It also appears that Brother Baker was involved with middle school children, who were participating in parish sponsored programs.”

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

Poll: Addressing Sex Abuse Scandals Should Be New Pope’s Top Priority

UNITED STATES
Christian Post

By Leonardo Blair, CP Contributor

March 20, 2013

While American Catholics are mostly satisfied with the selection of Argentina’s former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio as the new pope to lead the Catholic Church’s 1.2 billion adherents, they now want him to make addressing sex abuse scandals in the church his top priority.

Results of a national survey conducted by the Pew Research Center and published in The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life on Tuesday, show seven-in-ten American Catholics ranking addressing sex abuse scandals the highest from a list of possible priorities for Pope Francis.

The other possible priorities on the list were standing up for traditional moral values, spreading the Catholic faith, addressing priest shortage and reforming the Vatican bureaucracy. Only 49 percent of Catholics overall said standing up for traditional moral values should be a top priority for Pope Francis. Approximately 40 percent selected spreading the Catholic faith, 36 percent chose addressing the priest shortage while 35 percent felt reforming the Vatican bureaucracy should be top priorities for the new pope.

The poll, which was conducted March 13-17 among 1,501 adults including 325 Catholics, also highlighted that while many Catholics would like the church to make changes to some of the teachings and policies on issues like birth control and marriage, fewer of them expect it to happen.

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, Bishops, Curia. The Reforms That Are Coming

ROME
Chiesa

A “council of the crown” around the pope, with cardinals from the five continents. A drastic trimming of offices. A shakeup for the IOR. Novelties and unknowns of the pontificate of Francis

by Sandro Magister

ROME, March 21, 2103 – John XXIII appointed his new secretary of state on the very evening of his election as pope. And he was the great diplomat Domenico Tardini, at the time an ordinary priest, not yet bishop or cardinal.

But that is prehistory, compared to the earthquake of today.

Pope Francis has arrived in Rome “from the ends of the earth,” and he is innovating the manner of governing the Church from on high, starting with himself. The reform of the curia will come. And many other things will come as well. But after “a certain time,” he has cautioned.

Meanwhile, he has told all of the heads of the curia whose mandates ended with the resignation of his predecessor to get back to work. “Temporarily,” and “donec aliter provideatur,” until he, the new pope, decides. Since March 13 the Vatican curia has been a tremulous army of functionaries without a certain future.

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

Book reveals new pope’s views on celibacy, abuse crisis

UNITED STATES
USA Today

David Gibson, Religion News Service
March 20, 2013

Before he became Pope Francis, Argentine Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio offered clues to his views on celibacy, on the sexual abuse crisis and on civil unions.

He advocated a zero-tolerance approach to clergy abusers in a 2012 conversation with a leading Latin American rabbi. Bergoglio, then archbishop of Buenos Aires, criticized bishops who attempted to protect the image of the church by covering up abuse and shuffling predatory priests among parishes. The archbishop called that “a stupid idea.”

“You cannot be in a position of power and destroy the life of another person,” Bergoglio told Rabbi Abraham Skorka, rector of the Latin American Rabbinical Seminary. The book-length dialogue with the rabbi will be published in English in May. The passage was translated by Aleteia, a website promoting Catholic evangelization.

He told Skorka that when a bishop once asked him what he should do with priests suspected of molesting children, “I told him to take away the priests’ licenses, not to allow them to exercise the priesthood any more and to begin a canonical trial in that diocese’s court.”

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

Former Damien students file lawsuit for alleged sex abuse

HAWAII
Hawaii News Now

[with video]

By Lisa Kubota

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A new civil lawsuit accuses a former Damien Memorial School chaplain of sexually assaulting two former students in the early 1980’s. Father Gerald Funcheon worked at the school from 1982 to 1984. He is accused of molesting the alleged victims, identified as John Roe No. 9 and John Roe No. 10, multiple times.

The plaintiffs’ lawyers are also representing another former student, Kory Oakland, who filed a sex abuse lawsuit last year. The attorneys released excerpts of Funcheon’s testimony filmed under oath in September 2012 for that case. Attorney Jeff Anderson asked him about reports that there may have been roughly 50 victims over several decades during assignments across the country.

Q: “Do you think you remember the numbers of kids, those are people, youth under the age of 18, with whom you engaged in some sexual conduct or contact?”

A: “Over my lifetime?”

Q: “While a priest.”

A: “Yeah, I would say a dozen.”

Q: “There are some reports where it’s far in excess of that by your own report. Do you think you might be underestimating that number?”

A: “Wow, I — I couldn’t count ’em up. I’ll go — I don’t know. I’ll go 18. I — I don’t — I can’t give you a number on this. Okay?”

“He demonstrates the mind of the molester. He admits a few things but denies, minimizes and blames others,” said Anderson.

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.

Files reveal depth of abuses at Joliet Diocese

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By Christy Gutowski, Stacy St. Clair and David Heinzmann, Chicago Tribune reporters
March 21, 2013

The Joliet Diocese readily admitted that David Rudofski was sexually abused during his first confession at St. Mary Catholic Church in Mokena. It offered him an in-person apology from the bishop and more than six times his annual salary in the hope of putting a quick, quiet end to yet another ugly incident involving a priest.

But Rudofski wanted more than money.

The south suburban electrician wanted the diocese to truly pay for its repeated and, oftentimes, willful mishandling of sexual abuse cases involving clergy — and he insisted on a currency far more precious to the church than money. He demanded that the diocese settle its debt by turning over the secret archives it maintained on abusive priests and making them available for public consumption.

“What was I supposed to do? Take the money and run?” Rudofski said. “How would that help anybody else? If people don’t know how this was allowed to happen for decades, they can’t prevent it from happening again.”

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

Abuse victim sheds light on church secrets

ILLINOIS
WLS

[with video]

Ron Magers

March 20, 2013 (JOLIET, Ill.) (WLS) — The man who forced the Roman Catholic Diocese of Joliet to release its archived files on pedophile and predatory priests was sexually abused by a priest as a child and as an adult, has fought hard to shed light on the secrets of the church.

STORY: Secret archive contains alleged sex abuse records

DOCUMENTS: (WARNING: Some viewers may find parts of this material offensive.)
• Diocese of Joliet’s new victim outreach campaign
Father Burnett: Review Committee Allegations
Joliet Diocese Files of Fr. Donald O’Connor

The Full Secret Archive File of Fr. Donald O’Connor
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4

“If other people can see that I did it, then it might empower them to do the same thing,” said David Rudofski.

At the tender age of 8, Rudofski’s life changed. While giving his first confession at St. Mary’s parish in Mokena, he says Father James Burnett sexually molested him. Rudofski says he told his mother, but she didn’t believe him.

“What happened to me was not her fault,” he said. “She has struggled with this a lot and me as a parent, I can imagine that.”

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.

March 20, 2013

Critics Wait To See How Pope Francis Deals With Sex Abuse Scandal

UNITED STATES
KNAU

By Jonathan Blakley

Pope Francis has now been installed and the world’s Catholics are looking to see where he will lead the church. But one man in Rome has been trying to make sure the Vatican also deals with the church’s troubled past.

David Clohessy, who says he was a victim of sexual abuse at a young age by a Catholic priest, is the director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. By his count, he held 15 news conferences in Rome in the weeks leading up to the conclave at the Vatican.

Some of them at the Orange Hotel were packed, others were empty.

Clohessy soldiered on, and S.N.A.P. has mailed letters and sent faxes to the Vatican, hoping for a meeting or some type of response from Pope Francis. The group feels the issue of sexual abuse might fade away amid the fascination with a newly elected Pope who has charmed the public and the media.

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.

Attorney: Baker Abused Girls Too

PENNSYLVANIA
WeAreCentralPA

By: Aaron Cheslock
Updated: March 20, 2013

ALTOONA, BLAIR COUNTY – A woman is claiming she was sexually abused on multiple occasions by a Franciscan Brother starting when she was 15 years old.

Attorney Richard Serbin says the woman claims the abuse by Stephen Baker happened at Bishop McCort High in Johnstown.

She says because he was an Athletic Trainer, he was responsible for treating athletic injuries which led to the abuse.

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

Could the Vatican have a new Secretary of State after Easter?

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Now that Francis has been enthroned, Bergoglio will soon be making his first appointments

Marco Tosatti
Vatican City

Pope Francis has confirmed – pro tempore – all heads and secretaries of Congregations “donec aliter provideatur”, until it is decided otherwise. The statement released made no mention of the Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, but an explanation was issued stating that the announcement concerned him as well. Reliable Vatican sources say Pope Francis intends to choose his closest collaborator quickly, after Easter. Tarcisio Bertone will turn 79 in December and it seems only logical that he should leave the position he held as Benedict XVI’s right hand man, amid controversies and divisions.

These sources also mention an Italian member the diplomatic corps as the Argentinean Pope’s potential number two man. The current Substitute, Angelo Becciu and the Prefect of Propaganda Fide, the former nuncio Filoni, seem to be excluded as possible candidates because of their involvement in the rifts and internal struggles that have tainted Bertone’s management of the Secretariat of State. Pope Francis would apparently prefer to start with a clean slate and a new Secretary of State.

The Church is not short of possible candidates, starting with Archbishop Piero Parolin, Apostolic Nuncio to Venezuela. Archbishop Celestine Migliore, the Pope’s current ambassador in Warsaw who represented the Holy See at the UN is another potential future collaborator of the Pope. Both have close ties with the Dean of the College of Cardinals, Angelo Sodano, who was Secretary of State under John Paul II for many years and also under Benedict XVI for a period of time, before Bertone was appointed as his substitute.

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 kidnapped by junta: not denounced by pope

GERMANY
Myrtle Beach Online

Published: March 20, 2013

By GEIR MOULSON — Associated Press

BERLIN — A Jesuit priest who was kidnapped by the Argentine military junta in the 1970s said Wednesday that he and a fellow cleric weren’t denounced by the future Pope Francis, then leader of Argentina’s Jesuits.

The Rev. Francisco Jalics, a Hungarian native who now lives in a German monastery, said in a statement that he was following up on comments about the case last week because he had received a lot of questions and “some commentaries imply the opposite of what I meant.” He did not elaborate.

Jalics and another priest, Orlando Yorio, were kidnapped in 1976.

Jorge Mario Bergoglio, now the pontiff, has said he told the priests to give up their work in slums for their own safety, and they refused. Yorio, who is now dead, later accused Bergoglio of effectively delivering them to the death squads by declining to publicly endorse their work.

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.

Attorney: Brother Baker Also Abused Female Students

PENNSYLVANIA
WYTV

An Altoona attorney handling several lawsuits for former students who were allegedly sexually molested by Brother Stephen Baker, a teacher, athletic trainer and coach accused of abusing students across the Midwest, including in Warren, said Wednesday he is now representing a woman who claimed she was assaulted.

Attorney Richard Serbin, who is currently handling five lawsuits against area Catholic leaders in Pennsylvania courts, said on Wednesday his client was abused at Bishop McCort High School in Johnstown starting when she was 15 years old.

Dozens of former male students have claimed abuse, including 11 from Warren’s John F. Kennedy High School and St. Mary’s Middle School who were paid five-figure settlements from Youngstown Catholic Diocese and the Third Order Regular Franciscans for Baker’s actions, but no allegations of sexual abuse against female students had emerged until Wednesday.

Serbin said the type of abuse the girl endured paralleled the abuse endured by dozens of former male students who claimed Baker fondled them and digitally penetrated them under the guise of treating and providing preventative care for sports injuries.

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

What Argentine Priests Knew About the ‘Dirty War’

ARGENTINA
The New York Times

By MORT ROSENBLUM

In 1975, I watched Buenos Aires churches fill with distraught mothers praying futilely for news of missing sons and daughters. Troubled police officers frequented the confessionals. Most Argentines suspected that President Isabel Perón and her Rasputin, José López Rega, were behind official death squads that made so many people disappear. Priests knew the details.

A military junta bundled Ms. Peron off to exile in 1976 and unleashed full-bore repression. They called it war, but it wasn’t. Disparate acts by unconnected rival leftist groups brought institutional torture and official terror. Military flights dumped victims at sea. Still alive, they would gasp in water and sink.

For three crucial years, as placid Argentina headed toward hell, I was based in Buenos Aires. I arrived in 1973 when night noises ranged to wailing tango chords and traffic din. Within a year, those were punctuated by spine-curdling shrieks as victims were bundled into those famous Ford Falcons without license plates. By the time I left in 1976, after the coup, we slept in different places each night because of unsettling threats. When profiles of those shadowy death squads emerged, they were as we had thought: off-duty cops commanded by high-ranking police and military officers. Many were devout family men who believed themselves on a mission for God and country. My sense is that the “war” would have been far less dirty had the Roman Catholic church stood up to its perpetrators.

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.

Priester klagt Missbrauch an und wird suspendiert

UGANDA
Neue Zurcher Zeitung

(dpa) Ein katholischer Priester ist in Uganda aus dem Dienst entlassen worden, weil er Mitglieder der Kirche in dem ostafrikanischen Land des sexuellen Missbrauchs bezichtigt hatte.

Der Erzbischof der Hauptstadt Kampala suspendierte Pater Anthony Musaala mit der Begründung, dieser habe “der guten Moral der katholischen Gläubigen Schaden zugefügt” und “Hass und Verachtung gegenüber der Kirche angestachelt”, hiess es in einer Mitteilung, die am Mittwoch von der Zeitung “Daily Monitor” veröffentlicht wurde.

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.

Ein Mann für schwere Fälle

DEUTSCHLAND
Katholische

Bistum Trier | 20.03.2013 – Trier

Er gehört zu den Jüngeren unter den deutschen Bischöfen, hat sich aber bereits einen Namen als Mann für schwierige Aufgaben gemacht: Triers Bischof Stephan Ackermann ist seit gut drei Jahren mit der Aufklärung des Missbrauchsskandals in der katholischen Kirche beauftragt. Vieles hat der Rheinland-Pfälzer schon auf den Weg gebracht, aber auch viel Kritik einstecken müssen.

Der Job des Missbrauchsbeauftragten sei “nicht besonders vergnüglich”, sagt er. “Weil trotz allen Bemühens der Eindruck erweckt wird, hier wird immer nur getrickst, vertuscht und zurückgehalten.” Am Mittwoch wird der Oberhirte der ältesten deutschen Diözese 50 Jahre alt.

Die katholische Kirche hatte im Januar bei der Aufarbeitung der Missbrauchs-Taten einen herben Rückschlag erlitten, als sie eine wissenschaftliche Studie stoppte. Die Vorwürfe reichten von Aktenvernichtung bis Zensur und mündeten in mancher Forderung nach dem Rücktritt Ackermanns. Doch der gibt sich kämpferisch. Er habe seit jeher eine lückenlose Aufklärung gefordert. “Dranbleiben” wolle er an dem Thema, für die Bischofskonferenz und die Betroffenen, betont er. Und die Missbrauchsstudie mit einem neuen Partner in Angriff nehmen. Möglicherweise schon im April könnte der Neustart verkündet werden, hieß es vor kurzem.

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.

Missbrauch im Stift Kremsmünster: Urteil in „Mitwisser-Prozess“ erwartet

OSTERREICH
Nachrichten

STEYR/KREMSMÜNSTER. Über Jahrzehnte sollen Pater des Stiftsgymnasiums in Kremsmünster Schüler sexuell missbraucht und körperlich misshandelt haben. Zwei ehemalige Schüler, die selbst Opfer geworden sind, haben – wie berichtet – das Stift geklagt.

Die Verantwortlichen hätten nach einem Gespräch im Jänner 2012 zahlreiche Zusagen nicht eingehalten, argumentieren die Kläger.

So soll Abt Ambros Ebhart bei dem Gespräch zugesagt haben, dass es eine Aufarbeitung der Geschehnisse in dem Stift, ein Mahnmal und ein Schuldeingeständnis der Mitwisserschaft über den Kindesmissbrauch geben werde. Die beiden Männer haben eine Feststellungsklage beim Landesgericht Steyr mit einem Streitwert von 30.000 Euro eingebracht, gestern fand die letzte Verhandlungsrunde statt. Das Urteil steht noch aus.

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 and Protection: Your Help Needed

UNITED STATES
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

March 20, 2013

The National Survivor Advocates Coalition (NSAC) appreciates Pope Francis emphasis on protection in the homily of his installation Mass.

But the word must become kinetic to solve and eradicate the crisis of sexual abuse in the Church by priests and nuns.

It must have the energy of action behind it to truly protect children and give the survivors the protection of justice.

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.

YU’s Rabbi Schachter Under Fire For Racial Slur, Abuse Views

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Rabbi Hershel Schachter, a rosh yeshiva at Yeshiva University’s rabbinical seminary, called for the creation of panels to evaluate the veracity of abuse claims before they are forwarded to the authorities.

At a rabbinical conference in February in London, Schachter called “ridiculous” the idea that Jews should not turn fellow Jews over to secular authorities for fear of violating the principle of “mesirah,” or betrayal — the traditional Jewish prohibition on informing. In fact, he added, failure to cooperate with the authorities is a desecration of God’s name.

However, Schachter warned, communities need to ensure that the claims of abuse are accurate before passing them along to the police. To that end, he called for the creation of boards made up of mental health professionals who are also experts in Jewish law to evaluate whether accusations are credible.

Schachter warned that a false accusation could end up tearing apart families. He also raised the fear that a false allegation could land an innocent person in prison where he faced physical danger. For example, he said, someone convicted for abuse could end up in prison with a “shvartze”— a Yiddish term for a black person that is often deragatory — who hates Jews.

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.

Green Bay Diocese Pays $700,000 in Sex Abuse Settlement

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Public Radio

WUWM NEWS | Mar 20, 2013

The Catholic Diocese of Green Bay will pay $700,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by two men. Todd and Troy Merryfield were sexually abused by a former priest, John Feeney, in the 1970s when they were children. The men accused the diocese of withholding knowledge of Feeney’s previous sexual misconduct.

Feeney was convicted of assaulting the Merryfields. A judge overturned the verdict and ordered a new trial, after ruling that one of the jurors was biased.

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.

Trust in Scots clerics and church teaching broken, says bishop

SCOTLAND
The Tablet

20 March 2013

Trust in the Church in Scotland has been “broken”, the Bishop of Aberdeen has warned.

Bishop Hugh Gilbert used his statement welcoming the election of Pope Francis to highlight the “feeling of distress” within the Church.

“At the heart of it is a sense of things being broken,” he said, “things like personal integrity, trust in our bishops and priests, the credibility of our faith and teaching.”

Bishop Gilbert said “all of these things have seemed to collapse,” and that behind people’s sadness or anger “there is a great cry inside us for them to be given back to us. A cry for a new purity and honesty, for the Gospel, for Christ.”

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

What CNN and a Rabbi Have in Common: Siding With Abusers

UNITED STATES
The Philly Post

Stephen Silver

The high-profile Steubenville, Ohio, rape case ended last weekend with guilty verdicts for both defendants—leading to one of the more embarrassing segments in the history of CNN. Both, as well as other stories in the news, are symptomatic of a tendency I’ve noticed a whole lot the last couple of years: In cases of high-profile sex crimes, way too many people have way too much sympathy for the perpetrators, and not enough for the victims.

The Steubenville case, which has been in the national news for months, concerned two members of that town’s vaunted high school football team, in August of 2012, sexually assaulting a girl who had passed out. The case kicked off a widespread firestorm that included appearances by the hacker collective Anonymous, and a whole other debate about whether another case of an untouchable football program led to the covering up of horrible crimes. if you’re not familiar with the case, this New York Times piece is a good primer.

The two defendants, Ma’lik Richmond and Trent Mays, were both convicted, and while both must register permanently as sex offenders, because they were tried as juveniles neither is likely to serve more than two or three years of time in detention. …

Now we have controversial comments by Rabbi Hershel Schachter, a top Talmudic scholar and Rosh Yeshiva at New York’s Yeshiva University.

Rabbi Schachter, in a speech made at a London conference in February and reported by Paul Berger in the Jewish newspaper The Forward last week, suggested that Jewish communities should set up independent panels, comprised of Torah scholars, to weigh claims of child sexual abuse, to determine their veracity before the decision is made to proceed to the police.

Why? Because apparently Schachter is worried about Jewish convicted offenders going to prison, where they could end up “in a cell with a shvartze, in a cell with a Muslim, a black Muslim who wants to kill all the Jews.” Schachter went on to admit that a student confided in him years ago about being abused, after which he referred the student to a psychologist, and did not contact authorities.

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.

Give Minnesota sex abuse victims more time for justice

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JAMES C. BACKSTROM
Updated: March 19, 2013

We must recognize that the nature of these incidents means that feelings can be repressed well into adulthood.

Childhood sexual abuse is an epidemic. More than 80,000 American kids are sexually abused every year. One in four girls and one in six boys will be sexually abused before they reach age 18. Nearly 70 percent of all reported sexual assaults (including assaults on adults) occur against children ages 17 and under.

Some of these tragedies make high-profile news, like the Jerry Sandusky/Penn State scandal last year and the recent criminal charges against Lynn Seibel, a former teacher at Shattuck-St. Mary’s boarding school in Faribault. Most of these incidents, however, never get reported to police and prosecutors or see the light of day in a civil courtroom. Most victims of childhood sexual abuse lock away memories of horrible trauma deep inside their minds, for many years.

This is not that hard to understand if you think about it. These are frightened kids who often do not fully comprehend what is happening to them. And the vast majority are preyed upon by someone they know and trust: a parent or sibling, a relative, a coach, a teacher, a minister or priest, a Boy Scout leader, or an older family friend. Few actually fall victim to unknown sexual predators — and those few cases are much more likely to be reported promptly to law enforcement.

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.

Trial to Begin in Teaneck Rabbi Sex Abuse Case

NEW JERSEY
Patch

By Noah Cohen

March 19, 2013

Prosecutors plan to fly two Israeli boys to the United States to testify in the trial of a Teaneck rabbi who allegedly molested the teens while they stayed with him during a scholarship program, northjersey.com reported.

The trial of Rabbi Uzi Rivlin, 65, is set for next month in Hackensack. Rivlin was charged in 2011 with sexually abusing the boys in 2009 and 2010.

Prosecutors disclosed Tuesday in a pretrial hearing that Rivlin had been accused of sexual assault, child endangerment and public lewdness in 2000 in New York City, the report said. The rabbi ultimately pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor public lewdness charge.

Details of that case were not immediately available late Tuesday.

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 suspends Fr. Musaala over sex claims

UGANDA
New Vision

KAMPALA – The Archbishop of Kampala, Dr. Cyprian Kizito Lwanga, has suspended Fr. Anthony Musaala over a document he allegedly wrote that “damages good morals of Catholic believers and faults the Catholic teaching”.

“Fr. Anthony Musaala is suspended from celebrating sacraments and sacramentals, from the powers of governance in accordance with the law of the Church…as investigations are being carried out,” Lwanga said in a statement issued on Tuesday.

The suspension follows a letter, reportedly written by Musaala, claiming that many Catholic priests and even bishops are sexually abusing minors, have mistresses and children who they are concealing or have abandoned.

The letter called for review of the issue of celibate chastity in the Catholic Church.

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

Uganda’s critical dossier author priest suspended

UGANDA
Africa Review

By DAILY MONITOR in Kampala | Wednesday, March 20 2013

The Archbishop of Kampala, Dr Cyprian Kizito Lwanga, has suspended maverick cleric Fr Anthony Musaala, who authored a document criticising Catholic Church colleagues for sexual crimes among others.

Dr Lwanga, in a statement on Tuesday, said Fr Musaala had been suspended for the document, which “damages the good morals of the Catholic believers and faults the church’s teaching”.

According to Dr Lwanga, Fr Musaala admitted to authoring the document, which has been widely circulating on the internet.

“As per now, after the acceptance of Fr Musaala that he authored this document, the law prescribed by the Church in Can. 1369 takes its course. This law states that: “A person is to be punished with a just penalty, who, at a public event or assembly, or in a published writing, or by otherwise using the means of social communication, utters blasphemy, or gravely harms public morals, or rails at or excites hatred of or contempt for religion or the Church,” said the Archbishop.

“This means therefore, that Fr Musaala, because of the publication of his article in the public media, which damages good morals of Catholic believers and further expresses a wrong teaching against the Catholic Church’s teaching and that this stirs up hatred and contempt against the Church, he incurs a Ferendae sententiae penalty as prescribed by Can.1314, Dr Lwanga said in the statement.

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QC Calls For Former Pope’s Indictment

AUSTRALIA
Law Fuel

Geoffrey Robertson QC, the high profile Australian barrister is leading calls for the Vatican to lose its status as a state and to have the former Pope Benedict XVI to be indicted for his alleged cover up of child sex abuse by the Catholic Church.

The calls came at the screening of a documentary in which Robertson appeared when he gave evidence before the UN Committee on Rights of the Child.

The documentary, Silence in the House of God: Mea Maxima Culpa, (See trailer below) was screened at the same time as the new Pope was being elected.

Lawyer’s Weekly:

He argued that the former pope acted negligently in what Robertson estimates to be 100,000 cases of sex abuse by priests since 1981, when Ratzinger became head of the Vatican office known as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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Pastor suspected of abusing other girls in the past

INDIA
The Hindu

Devesh K. Pandey

The pastor arrested on Monday for allegedly raping a minor inmate of his care home at Samaipur Badli in Outer Delhi is suspected to have sexually abused more girls in the past. The accused had been sexually abusing the minor for the past seven years.

The police on Tuesday produced the accused, Abraham Sahoo, before a court that sent him to one-day police custody. “He is being interrogated to ascertain his other suspected involvement,” said a police officer. Abraham, who heads the institution, had been living separately from his wife.

The Child Welfare Committee has directed the police to produce before it all the children staying at the institution. The Committee has also issued a directive to the area Deputy Commissioner of Police to ascertain whether other girls were also sexually assaulted by the accused. The matter regarding child labour and physical abuse was reported to the police last Thursday through Prayas Helpline.

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I-Team Exclusive: Secret archive contains records of alleged sexual abuse in Diocese of Joliet

JOLIET (IL)
WLS

[with video]

[document]

Chuck Goudie

March 19, 2013 (JOLIET, Ill.) (WLS) — The I-Team has learned that a secret archive containing records on priests accused of sexual abuse was covered up for years in the Diocese of Joliet. Also included in the files was information on the suicides of victims who complained, but were ignored.

The archive contains hidden personnel files of priests who, according to the records, allegedly violated their oath of fidelity. Yet the files were concealed by bishops who broke their oath of honesty.

The files contain alleged incidents that spanned more than six decades.

Dave Rudofski is one of the faces of innocence lost in the Diocese of Joliet. In 1982, Rudofski was 8 years old and living in Mokena.

He was an altar boy at St. Mary’s Parish, and says he was molested while giving his first confession to Father James Burnett.

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Film takes sex abuse guilt to the Vatican

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Tim Kroenert March 20, 2013

Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God (M). Director: Alex Gibney. 102 minutes

The sexual abuse of children by religious is by its nature an emotional, as well as profoundly ethical, moral, spiritual and criminal issue. Films and documentaries about this subject will therefore necessarily appeal to the emotions of the viewer. This can be to their detriment, if the emotional appeal is emphasized over factual detail.

The 2007 film Deliver Us From Evil fell into this trap; an emotionally harrowing film that leaned heavily on the extensive and graphic testimony of one offending (and only self-interestedly repentant) priest, while failing at times to substantiate some of its more outlandish claims. This is the kind of sensationalism that feeds prejudices and arguably does more to exploit victims than to help them.

Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence In The House of God, by contrast, achieves a balance between its powerful emotional appeal and its integrity as a piece of investigative filmmaking.

It begins with a particular case study, that of Fr Lawrence Murphy, a key supporter and later head of a school for deaf boys in Milwaukee. Director Gibney interviews the now adult victims of Murphy, whose atrocities at the school during the late 1960s and 1970s included using the confessional as a kind of lair in which to abuse boys.

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Pope slow to act against child abuse by clergy – activist group

UNITED STATES
PanARMENIAN

PanARMENIAN.Net – A Roman Catholic activist group said that Pope Francis was slow as head of the Argentine church to act against sexual abuse by clergy and urged him to apologize for what it called church protection for two priests later convicted of sexually assaulting children, AP reported.

A lawyer for some of the victims, meanwhile, said the future pope, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, had not met with or helped victims, and charged that mid-level church officials who covered up the problem haven’t lost their jobs.

The Buenos Aires archbishop’s office didn’t immediately comment on the complaints, which came as Francis was being installed as pope in a Vatican ceremony seen around the world.

The U.S.-based Bishop Accountability group cited the cases of two priests: Father Julio Cesar Grassi, who ran the “Happy Children” foundation and was convicted of pedophilia in 2008, and Father Napoleon Sasso, convicted in 2007 of abusing girls at a soup kitchen in suburban Buenos Aires, where he was assigned after being accused of pedophilia elsewhere.

Grassi is currently free pending appeal, thanks partly to a court filing on his behalf by the Argentine church, which was headed by Bergoglio as archbishop of Buenos Aires. Bergoglio oversaw Argentina’s bishops conference when Sasso was assigned to the soup kitchen at a chapel, said the victims attorney, Ernesto Moreau.

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March 19, 2013

Pope’s gentle message dodges hot button issues

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

With an inaugural homily urging respect for “God’s creation”, Pope Francis on Tuesday subtly pressed a conservative Catholic message while urgent challenges loom for the Church.

The first Latin American pope has been heralded by supporters as a progressive, but scholars say he is unlikely to bend on Church doctrine — and key moral issues were glaringly absent from his speech.

His predecessor Benedict XVI formally resigned because of old age, but some religious watchers say he buckled because of a bitter power struggle within the Church and a poisonous sexual abuse scandal — concerns that Francis will have to address.

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Covering up sexual abuse is a crime, Cardinal

SOUTH AFRICA
Daily Maverick

Pierre de Vos

20 Mar 2013 (South Africa)

The Catholic Church has rightly been criticised for its handling of the widespread sexual abuse of children by priests across the world. In order to protect the “good name” of the church, many abusers were never reported to the police but were sent for “treatment” and counselling before being “redeployed” by the church to other positions. Some of them then went on to abuse other children. Unfortunately, Cardinal Wilfred Napier, who has dealt with such cases in South Africa, seems to be unaware that if he fails to report those priests to the police he is committing a criminal offence and exposing himself to a five-year prison sentence.

In a controversial interview with a BBC radio journalist, Cardinal Napier indicated that when he dealt with cases in which priests have sexually abused children, he followed a protocol developed by the Church itself. He insisted that each case was referred to the Doctrine of the Faith office and the Pope. Cardinal Napier seems to believe that the Church is the victim of unfair publicity. In the interview he complained:

“I really would resent it if someone said to me you mishandled that case. Some of the priests went, according to the wisdom of the time, the best information that we had from psychologists, they went for treatment, came back and have been under – what we call it – personal surveillance and have functioned quite normally ever since. Others left the priesthood, they were laicised, but it depended on each case being handled differently because of the peoples conditions were different.”

Nowhere in the interview does he say that he actually reported any priests who confessed that they sexually abused children to the police. Instead, displaying an admirable understanding and compassion for abusers (an understanding and compassion not displayed towards others involved in consensual and often loving sexual behaviour), he argued that such priests act out of a defect in their own character and that they are not necessarily culpable for what they do.

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Prosecutor, defense argue points …

NEW JERSEY
The Record

Prosecutor, defense argue points in Teaneck rabbi’s pre-trial hearing on child sex-assault charges

Tuesday March 19, 2013

BY KIBRET MARKOS
STAFF WRITER
The Record

One of the two teenage boys who accused a Teaneck rabbi of molesting him at his home had made false accusations of sexual abuse against his own father, the rabbi’s attorney told a judge in Hackensack on Tuesday.

Bergen County prosecutors, meanwhile, disclosed that Rabbi Uzi Rivlin, who is set for trial next month on child sexual-assault charges, was accused years ago of another sexual assault in New York and later pleaded guilty to public lewdness.

The hearing in state Superior Court offered a glimpse into the complexities of Rivlin’s upcoming trial, in which he is accused of molesting two 13-year-old Israeli boys at his home in 2009 and 2010. Rivlin has maintained his innocence, telling authorities that his accusers were troubled teens and that he did nothing to them.

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Green Bay Diocese settles abuse lawsuit for $700,000

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

March 19, 2013

The Diocese of Green Bay has agreed to pay $700,000 to two brothers sexually assaulted by a now-defrocked priest, Father John Patrick Feeney, in the 1970s, the first lawsuit of its kind to go to trial in Wisconsin since such cases were blocked by a state Supreme Court ruling in 1995.

“First and foremost, I would like to say I am truly sorry to Todd Merryfield and Troy Merryfield, as well as their families, for the pain they have endured,” Green Bay Bishop David Ricken said in a statement announcing the settlement Tuesday.

Michael Finnegan, an attorney representing the brothers, called them “extremely courageous.”

“They came forward when they were kids, and again to put Feeney behind bars, and now again in the civil trial,” Finnegan said. “They are truly champions for kids.”

The settlement matches a $700,000 judgment awarded to the brothers by an Outagamie Jury in July. A judge overturned the verdict because of juror misconduct, and both sides were preparing for a new trial in May.

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Merryfield’s settle priest sex abuse suit

WISCONSIN
WHBY

Two brothers and the Green Bay Catholic Diocese have a deal in a child sex abuse lawsuit.

Troy and Todd Merryfield sued the diocese for fraud, after they were molested by former priest John Feeney, in 1978. They claim the diocese should have told parishioners at St. Nicholas Church in Freedom, about Feeney’s past sex abuse allegations.

The Merryfield’s will receive $700,000. That’s the same amount a jury awarded in their first trial, but a judge threw out the jury’s decision, after determining that one juror was biased. A second trial was scheduled for May.

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Green Bay diocese settles with 2 sex abuse victims

WISCONSIN
San Francisco Chronicle

APPLETON, Wis. (AP) — The Diocese of Green Bay has settled a lawsuit brought by two brothers who accused the diocese of fraud.

Todd and Troy Merryfield alleged the diocese withheld knowledge of a former priest’s prior sexual misconduct. The Rev. John Feeney later was convicted of sexually abusing the brothers in the late 1970s when they were boys.

The Post-Crescent (http://post.cr/139tvni) reports a judge dismissed the lawsuit, based on the agreement.

Bishop David Ricken issued a statement apologizing to the Merryfields and all victims of child sexual abuse.

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Green Bay Catholic Diocese settles sex abuse case, apologizes

WISCONSIN
Press-Gazette

APPLETON — Two brothers who were molested by the Rev. John Feeney in the 1970s have reached a settlement with the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay in a civil case that accused the church of withholding knowledge of Feeney’s prior sexual misconduct.

Outagamie County Judge Nancy Krueger dismissed the case on Monday, based on the agreement reached by the diocese and Todd and Troy Merryfield. No information was immediately available on the terms of the settlement.

Green Bay Bishop David Ricken issued a statement on Tuesday, apologizing to the Merryfields and all victims of child sexual abuse.

“First and foremost, I would like to say I am truly sorry to Todd Merryfield and Troy Merryfield, as well as their families, for the pain they have endured from child sexual abuse and the lawsuits that followed,” Ricken wrote. “I hope and pray that they can experience God’s healing presence within their hearts.”

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Two discordant ‘dirty war’ narratives on Pope Francis

ROME
Tucson Sentinel

Posted Mar 18, 2013

Jason Berry
GlobalPost

ROME — The news from Argentina on what Pope Francis did, or didn’t do during the years of the dirty war has shadowed the early days of his papacy, prompting the Vatican to denounce reporting to that effect.

Could it be, on this one, that the Vatican may be right?

How to square the image of a cleric accused by some of assisting fascist generals — the men guilty of kidnappings, torture, abduction of newborns whose mothers were murdered — with the pope of gentle demeanor who blessed a seeing-eye dog as he charmed the media at an audience on Saturday?

At issue are Father Jorge Mario Bergoglio’s years in the byzantine society of Argentina when it hit moral rock bottom.

His family carried its own nightmare of Italy’s descent into political madness.

“My father escaped from Italy because of fascism,” the pope’s sister, Maria Elena Bergoglio, has told Paolo Mastrolilli of La Stampa / Vatican Insider in Buenos Aires. “Do you think it is possible that my brother could be an accomplice of a military dictatorship? It would have been like betraying his memory.”

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Pope Francis focuses on the poor, the media focus on the sex abuse scandal

ROME
GlobalPost

Jason Berry

ROME — Under blue skies, Pope Francis at his investiture Mass today at St. Peter’s Square called on international state officials there to be “protectors of one another and of the environment…We must not be afraid of goodness or even tenderness.”

An estimated 200,000 people packed the square and streets surrounding the basilica.

The pope’s sermon, amid the beauty and solemnity of a Latin Mass, spoke specifically to representatives of governments seated aside the altar, from US Vice President Joe Biden to Zimbabwe’s President Robert Mugabe.

“I would ask to all of those who have positions of responsibility in economic, political and social life, and all men and women of goodwill,” he said. “Let us be ‘protectors’ of creation, protectors of God’s plan inscribed in nature…keeping watch over our emotions, over our hearts.”

Yet in the unfolding narrative of a pope calling on the world’s Catholics to focus on the poor and marginalized, Francis was trailed again by news coverage from Argentina that put him in a negative light in his response to clergy sex abuse.

“During most of the 14 years that Bergoglio served as archbishop of Buenos Aires, rights advocates say, he did not take decisive action to protect children or act swiftly when molestation charges surfaced,” wrote Nick Miroff in a piece published yesterday in the Washington Post, “nor did he extend apologies to the victims of abusive priests after their misconduct came to light.”

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“Change of Skin”, From Argentina’s “Dirty War” to the Vatican…

ARGENTINA
Centre for Research on Globalization

“Change of Skin”, From Argentina’s “Dirty War” to the Vatican: Pope Francis “Dissociates Himself” from Father Bergoglio

By Horacio Verbitsky
Global Research, March 19, 2013

Pagina 12 (Translated from the Spanish)

Translation of an article from Página 12 of Buenos Aires for March 17, 2013 (Global Research Spanish page)

The first press conference Pope Francis’ spokesman gave was for the purpose of detaching him from Jorge Mario Bergoglio, accused of turning two priests over to the ESMA [Escuela de Mecánica de la Armada]. Since the statements and the documents are incontestable, the method chosen was to discredit those who circulated them, characterizing this newspaper as leftist. The traditions were followed: it is the same thing that Bergoglio said about Jalics and Yorio to those who kidnapped them.

In his first meeting with the press after the election of the Jesuit Jorge Mario Bergoglio as Pope of the Roman Catholic Apostolic Church, his spokesman, Federico Lombardi, also a Jesuit, dismissed as old calumnies of the anti-clerical Left, spread by a newspaper characterized by defamatory campaigns, the allegations on the performance of the former provincial of the Company of Jesus during the Argentine dictatorship and, especially, the role he played in the disappearance of two priests under him, Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics. Argentine opposition media and politicians at the same time included the article “Un Ersatz,” published in this paper the day after the papal election, among Kirchnerista reactions to Bergoglio’s enthronement. In addition, a sector of the governing party chose to acclaim him as “Argentine and Peronista,” the same slogan with which José Rucci is remembered every September, and to deny the incontestable facts.

The reconciliation

From Germany, where Jalics lives in retirement in a monastery, the German Jesuit provincial said that the priest had been reconciled with Bergoglio. The aged Jalics, now 85 years old, declared on the other hand that he felt reconciled with “those events, which are a closed matter for me.” But he said nevertheless that he would not comment on Bergoglio’s actions in the case. For Catholics, reconciliation is a sacrament. In the words of one of the major Argentine theologians, Carmelo Giaquinta, it consists of “pardoning others from the heart for offenses received,” by which is meant only that Jalics has forgiven the harm they did to him. That says more about him than about Bergoglio. Jalics does not deny the facts, which he recounted in his 1994 book Ejercicios de Meditación:

“Many people who held political convictions on the extreme right looked unfavorably on our presence in the slums. They interpreted the fact that we would live there as support for the guerrilla and they proposed denouncing us as terrorists. We knew which way the wind was blowing and who was responsible for these calumnies. So I went to speak with the person in question and I explained to him that he was playing with our lives. The man promised me that he would let the military know that we were not terrorists. From later statements by an officer and 30 documents I had access to later, we were able to prove without a doubt that this man had not kept his promise but that, on the contrary, he had given a false denunciation to the military.”

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Don’t Write A Suicide Note Without Showing It To Your Lawyer

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

On Feb. 9, 2011, Bernard Shero sat down to type a suicide note to his parents.

“Dear Mom and Dad,” he began. “I know the Easter season has become a very sad season for us. We have lost many loved ones during the year. I am truly sorry for making the time of your birthday a time of loss as well but I feel that I do not have much of a choice here, and I think deep in your hearts, you know why.”

On Feb. 9, 2011, Bernard Shero was a 47-year-old ex-Catholic school teacher accused of raping a former sixth-grade student named Billy Doe.

The day he wrote his two-page note to his parents, Shero was a hunted man. Detectives from the district attorney’s office had called Burton Rose, Shero’s lawyer, to ask if Shero was going to turn himself in. The detectives wanted Shero to report to the D.A.’s office at 6 a.m. on Feb. 10, 2011. Or else, the detectives would be driving out to Shero’s apartment armed with an arrest warrant.

Read more at http://www.bigtrial.net/2013/03/if-youre-going-to-write-suicide-note.html#7zhc8uMoR48Rxol1.99

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Irish Pedophile Legacy Highlights Challenge to New Pope

IRELAND
Bloomberg

By Colm Heatley – Mar 19, 2013

For Irish victims of priestly sexual abuse, Pope Francis needs to disclose what the Vatican knows about the crimes — and fully apologize for them.

“He could start telling the truth about the extent of Vatican knowledge,” Andrew Madden, a computer consultant from Dublin who claims priests molested him when he was an altar boy in the 1980s, said by phone. “If an apology was preceded by that level of honesty, that would be very significant.”

As Francis begins his reign as the 266th pope following his inauguration yesterday, he faces a global wave of disgust and mistrust toward the church amid abuse cases from the U.S. to Latin America. The wounds run deep in Ireland, one of Europe’s most Catholic countries, underscoring the challenge the pope faces to reviving a religion eroded by secularism and shaken by scandal.

Priests engaged in “endemic” molestation of children for decades, according to two reports by the Irish government issued since 2009, with prelates usually more interested in avoiding scandal to the church than exposing offenders and protecting children.

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Was Pope Francis a bystander in Buenos Aires?

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

Posted by Melinda Henneberger on March 19, 2013

All sorts of Catholics — the hurt and the whole, the progressive and the traditional — want to believe our eyes and trust all the positive signs and signals out of Rome in the week since Francis was chosen to succeed Benedict: “It’s like falling in love,” one friend said. “God help me,” another agreed.

It’s been a long, bruising decade since the height of the clerical sex abuse scandal here in the U.S. in 2002, and this new pontiff’s message so far, in both words and symbolic gestures, is a welcome one for many of us who chose to stay anyway, denying nothing.

“How I would like a church that is poor and for the poor,” he told reporters, and a little bit of my “wait and see,” posture gave way. “True power is service,” he tweeted Tuesday. “The Pope must serve all people, especially the poor, the weak, the vulnerable.” Amen, of course.

He took the name of Francis of Assisi, he has said, as “the man of poverty, the man of peace, the man who loves and protects creation; these days we do not have a very good relationship with creation, don’t we?” Oh my, and an enviro, too? Don’t fall before all the facts are in, I told myself, but with limited success, I’m afraid, as I read that he had real reform in mind, and had announced that no one in the Curia should feel too safe in his current job. All assignments, he said, were only donec aliter provideatur — “until other provisions are made.”

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Is Pope Francis open to optional celibacy?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Thomas Reese | Mar. 19, 2013

In an 2012 interview about celibacy, then-Cardinal Bergoglio notes that in the Eastern churches priests can be married and “They are very good priests.” He says that “It is a matter of discipline, not of faith. It can change.”

He states his support for celibacy in the interview. “I am in favor of maintaining celibacy, with all its pros and cons, because we have ten centuries of good experiences rather than failures,” he explains. “Tradition has weight and validity.”

But what is remarkable is the way he qualifies his statements: “For the moment, I am in favor of maintaining celibacy….” Likewise, when he notes that some organizations are pushing for more discussion about the issue, he says, “For now, the discipline of celibacy stands firm.”

“For the moment,” “For now” are not the kind of qualifications one normally hears when bishops and cardinals discuss celibacy.

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Green Bay Catholic Diocese Reaches Settlement with Abuse Victims

GREEN BAY (WI)
WBAY

The Catholic Diocese of Green Bay says it has reached a settlement with two brothers who were abused by a priest, avoiding a new trial.

Todd and Troy Merryfield had a civil lawsuit against the diocese, saying Church officials were aware of allegations of sexual abuse against Father John Patrick Feeney before he abused the Merryfields as boys in 1978.

The Merryfields won their lawsuit last May and were awarded $700,000, but a new trial was ordered after concerns that a juror had an undisclosed bias. A re-trial was scheduled for this coming May.

The diocese did not disclose the terms of the settlement.

With Tuesday’s announcement, Bishop David Ricken issued the following statement:

First and foremost, I would like to say I am truly sorry to Todd Merryfield and Troy Merryfield, as well as their families, for the pain they have endured from child sexual abuse and the lawsuits that followed. I hope and pray that they can experience God’s healing presence within their hearts.

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‘Paedophiles must go to jail’

SOUTH AFRICA
The New Age

Chris Makhaye

There are mixed feelings on the streets about Durban-based Roman Catholic priest Cardinal Wilfrid Napier’s comment that paedophilia was “an illness and not a criminal act”.

Most of those interviewed differed with Napier and said paedophiles should be tried in a court of law and if convicted, imprisoned.

Ramesh Mahabeer, a Durban businessman, said priests who were found to have committed the crime should be sentenced to long jail terms.

“We rely on priests for spiritual healing. We also rely on them to do God’s work. If they go out and rape and abuse young boys they are committing an unspeakable crime. They should be sent to jail for a long time like common criminals because they are abusing the trust that is placed in them. The community regard them as God’s own representatives,” Mahabeer said.

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Pope Francis supports zero tolerance of child abuse

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

by Thomas Reese | Mar. 19, 2013

Pope Francis is on record as supporting zero tolerance for the sexual abuse of minors by priests. In a 2012 interview, then-Cardinal Bergoglio said that a bishop called him for advice on how to deal with it, and “I told him to take away the priests’ licenses, not to allow them to exercise the priesthood any more, and to begin a canonical trial in that diocese’s court.”

He went on to say that he was unconcerned about the impact on the image of the church. “I do not believe in taking positions that uphold a certain corporative spirit in order to avoid damaging the image of the institution.” He was critical of the earlier practice in the United States of moving priests to a different parish. “It is a stupid idea; that way, the priest just takes the problem with him wherever he goes.”

He noted that Pope Benedict supported “Zero tolerance for that crime” and admired “the courage and uprightness of Pope Benedict on the subject.” He says, “we must never turn a blind eye” to abuse. “You cannot be in a position of power and destroy the life of another person.”

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Heritage and the Diocese

HOLYOKE (MA)
Valley Advocate

By Maureen Turner

In the late 19th century, the Lyman Street area of downtown Holyoke underwent a significant change. Once home to Irish immigrants, who’d arrived in the city in the 1840s to work on its dams and canals, the neighborhood now began to be dominated by Polish immigrants, many of whom came from across the river in Chicopee, said Olivia Mausel, chairwoman of the Holyoke Historical Commission. The newly arrived Poles opened shops and other businesses and built a Catholic church and school.

Over the years, the neighborhood underwent more changes, most notably during the urban renewal period in the 1950s. But a strong Polish influence remains in the area, from businesses like Kay’s Pastry Shop and the Polish Delicatessen to Pulaski and Kosciuszko parks, both named for Polish-born heroes of the American Revolution. In 2011, city officials began looking into creating a Polish Heritage Historic District in the neighborhood to preserve that piece of Holyoke history, an effort that has met with a good deal of support.

At the heart of the proposed district is the former Mater Dolorosa church—fittingly so, given the central role the church has played in Holyoke’s Polish community since it was built at the turn of the 20th century. But more recently, Mater Dolorosa has also been at the heart of an acrimonious dispute between its one-time parishioners and the Diocese of Springfield, which closed the church in 2011. A group of Mater Dolorosa parishioners has been fighting that closure and hopes that the creation of a historic district would protect the building from redevelopment.

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Abuse victims want pope to open Argentina files

ARGENTINA
WHBF

Posted: Mar 19, 2013

By MICHAEL WARREN
Associated Press
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) – A U.S. group that tracks clergy abuse called on Pope Francis to apologize Tuesday for what it called the Argentine church’s protection of two priests who were eventually convicted of abusing children.

The Bishop Accountability group cites the case of Father Julio Cesar Grassi, who ran the “Happy Children” foundation and was convicted of pedophilia in 2008, and Father Napoleon Sasso, convicted in 2007 of abusing girls at a soup kitchen in suburban Buenos Aires. Sasso had been moved to the kitchen by church authorities after he got into trouble for pedophilia in remote San Juan province.

Jorge Bergoglio, who became Argentina’s cardinal in 2001, wasn’t directly involved in any sex abuse scandals or coverups, but he failed to remove priests accused of sexually abusing their faithful, and refused to meet with the victims, their attorney Ernesto Moreau told The Associated Press.

“Bergoglio has been the strongest man in the Argentine church since the beginning of this century,” Moreau said, and yet “the leadership of the church has never done anything to remove these people from these places, and neither has it done anything to relieve the pain of the victims.”

Now Grassi is free on appeal, thanks in part to the church’s report. Before he was convicted, he thanked Bergoglio for “never abandoning him.”

Bishop Accountability co-director Anne Doyle says this shows Bergoglio was behind the curve in the Catholic church’s global struggle to deal with sex abuse by its priests, which began in 2002 after thousands of cases became public in the United States and around the world.

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30,000 People Dissapeared in Argentina in the 1970s-80s, What Did Pope Francis Do to Help?

ARGENTINA
PolicyMic

Jeff Raines

Unfortunately, we live in a world where tragedy, death, and violence continue to hurt those around us. And when these events happen we are left wondering in what ways could we have done more, what we could have done better, and who we can blame for a lack of greater action. This time the target of blame is Pope Francis I, the 266th pontiff on the Catholic Church, and a man formerly known as Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio from Argentina.

It is unfair to say Bergoglio did not do enough during a military regime so terrible that as many as 30,000 people disappeared or were killed during the “Dirty War.” From 1976-1983, the military junta that controlled Argentina sponsored terrorist activities for fringe military groups in support of the regime. This led to those who openly disagreed with the regime, as well as those suspected of disagreement to be taken from their homes to never been seen again.

During this time period Bergoglio was the head of the Jesuit order in Argentina, and accusations about his actions revolve around events he could not control. The first of these is how the regime stolen the infants to place them in regime-supporting families. In 2010, he testified in a trial about these stolen babies that he only knew about the practices after the country returned to a democratic state. Instances in which Argentines did reach out to him for help about missing relatives he did give them a name of another Bishop that might have more information – but this by no means a contradiction or admission of knowing more of these heinous acts, he was just trying to supply what information he could.

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Priest gets 31 years in jail for raping minor

INDIA
Business Standard

A priest was today handed down 31 years in jail by a fast track court for abducting and raping a minor girl in December last year.

Special Judge Vimlesh Tanwar awarded Sanjay Kherwar alias Shailender Puri 7 years in jail for kidnapping, 10 years for rape, 2 years for criminal intimidation, 2 years for cheating and 10 years under PCSAA, besides imposing a Rs 10,000 fine.

All the sentences would run concurrently.

Puri, who was living in a temple, had raped the Class XI student in Ugala village, prosecution said.

The girl was rescued with the arrest of Puri a few days later and he was booked under relevant sections of IPC and the Protection of Child from Sexual Assault Act (PCSAA).

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Challenges to vision of a ‘Poor Church for the Poor’

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

by John L. Allen Jr. | Mar. 19, 2013

Rome —
Just in case anybody missed the key line from his homily during Tuesday’s inaugural Mass, Pope Francis later made it his third tweet since taking office: “True power is service. The Pope must serve all people, especially the poor, the weak, the vulnerable.”

The line builds on a consistent theme since Francis’ election, memorably expressed during a meeting with journalists Saturday.

“How I would like a poor church for the poor,” Francis said. It’s a fitting sentiment for a pope who took his name from Francis of Assisi, a saint renowned for his love affair with Lady Poverty.

Now that the new pope has reached the end of his beginning, the focus will shift from style to substance, meaning the hard work of translating his promising start into the nuts and bolts of policy. With regard to fostering a “poor church for the poor,” Francis will face at least four challenges right out of the gate.

1. The myth and reality of Vatican wealth

Given the magnificence of St. Peter’s Basilica and the Apostolic Palace, the Vatican may seem a counterintuitive place to pursue the dream of a poor church. Some may expect the new pope to hold a fire sale in St. Peter’s Square — in a metaphorical sense following his namesake, Francis of Assisi, by stripping the place naked before starting anew.

Such a program is, in truth, easier to applaud than to accomplish.

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Installation Mass Homily of Pope Francis

UNITED STATES
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

For Immediate Release
3/19/13

Contact: Kristine Ward, Chair, National Survivor Advocates Coalition (NSAC) KristineWard@hotmail.com 937-272-0308

The National Survivor Advocates Coalition (NSAC) appreciates Pope Francis emphasis today on protection.

But the word must become kinetic to solve and eradicate the crisis of sexual abuse in the Church by priests and nuns.

It must have the energy of action behind it to truly protect children and give the survivors the protection of justice.

Given the gravity of this crisis to speak of protection and directly link the word to children in the inaugural homily holds out hope and not to act on these words would border on cruelty not on tenderness.

That means removals and resignations not only of predator priests and nuns but Cardinals, Archbishops, Bishops, Curia and Chancery personnel who aided and abetted criminals and obstructed justice favoring the predator over the child. Criminally convicted Bishop Robert Finn of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph must be replaced.

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New Report Raises Questions About Pope Francis’ Response to Sex Abuse Scandal

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

Post by Sarah Posner

The Pew Center’s Forum on Religion and Public Life is out with a new poll on American Catholics’ views on the new pope: almost three-quarters of them are “happy” with the choice, Pew reports.

What should the new pope’s priorities be, for American Catholics? According to Pew, a top priority is dealing with the sex abuse scandal:

Seven-in-ten Catholics say that addressing the sex abuse scandal should be “a top priority” for Francis. U.S. Catholics as a whole attach less importance to other possible priorities on the list. But among Catholics who say they attend Mass at least once a week, roughly equal numbers cite “standing up for traditional moral values” (65%) and “addressing the sex abuse scandal” (63%) as top priorities for the new pope. By contrast, among Catholics overall 49% say that standing up for traditional moral values should be “a top priority” for Pope Francis. Roughly four-in-ten Catholics or fewer think that spreading the Catholic faith (39%), addressing the priest shortage (36%) and reforming the Vatican bureaucracy (35%) should be top priorities for the new pope.

This news coincides with an extensive report in the Washington Post on Pope Francis’ reaction (as Archbishop Bergoglio) to the sex abuse scandal in Argentina, which won’t inspire much confidence or optimism about his possible global response to the scandal as pope:

Father Julio Cesar Grassi was a celebrity in the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires. The young, dynamic, ­media-savvy priest networked with wealthy Argentines to fund an array of schools, orphanages and job training programs for poor and abandoned youths, winning praise from Argentine politicians and his superior, Archbishop Jorge Mario Bergoglio.

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Bergoglio OK’d slain priest sainthood cases

ARGENTINA
Albany Times Union

By MICHAEL WARREN, Associated Press

Updated 11:58 am, Tuesday, March 19, 2013

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Before he became Pope Francis, Argentina’s Catholic leader took the first steps toward granting sainthood status to priests and other Catholics who were murdered in July 1976 as Argentina’s dictatorship was killing thousands of so-called “subversives.”

The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, confirmed Tuesday that it was Jorge Bergoglio who approved the beatification cause of Carlos de Dios Murias, a Franciscan priest killed in Argentina’s La Rioja province, where his mission had challenged the interests of powerful local leaders.

A fellow Franciscan priest, a Frenchman named Gabriel Longueville, was found alongside Murias. Both had their eyes gouged out and hands cut off, allegedly after being kidnapped by a military death squad. A Catholic lay worker who collaborated with them, Wenceslao Pedernera, was found beaten to death days later. The diocese of La Rioja province has been working on a sainthood case for all three since 2011.

Lombardi said that as leader of Argentina’s bishops, Bergoglio also approved a sainthood investigation for five Pallotine churchmen killed at St. Patrick’s Church in Buenos Aires. Fathers Alfredo Kelly, Alfredo Leaden and Pedro Dufau and their seminarians Salvador Berbeito and Emilio Barletti were shot to death by a right-wing hit squad. The killers left graffiti saying the deaths were in revenge for a leftist guerrilla bombing of a police station two days earlier that had killed 18 people.

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Hove court hears of ‘raucous’ party of sex assault accused priest

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

A former choirboy described a “sexually charged” party which he attended with a priest accused of assaulting him.

The man, who was a teenager in the 1980s, said he felt “singled out” by ex-priest, Father Keith Wilkie Denford, and church organist, Michael Mytton, who are both accused of sexually assaulting him and another boy.

Yesterday the alleged victim told jurors at Hove Crown Court that he worked as a waiter at a “raucous” dinner party organised by Denford, now of Broad Reach Mews, Shoreham, who at the time led the flock at John the Evangelist Church in Burgess Hill.

Previously the court was told that after the party the boy and his friend were given alcohol and Denford got in the bath with one of the youngsters.

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Regina lawyer tussles with Canada over legal fees for Residential Schools case

CANADA
CBC News

John Weidlich CBC News

Posted: Mar 19, 2013

Years after a settlement was reached to pay compensation to thousands of former students of Indian Residential Schools, the federal government continues to dispute the fees it should pay to one of the lead lawyers in the case: Regina’s Tony Merchant.

The tussle over fees sought by the Merchant Law Group, some $20 million, was back before the courts in February with a decision published recently to an online legal database.

The decision, by Court of Appeal judge Gary Lane, outlines how federal officials have been trying to get documentation to support Merchant’s request for payment.

Merchant was reluctant to release his files, to protect the lawyer-client relationship.

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Roache ‘very sorry for offence caused’ by sex abuse comments

UNITED KINGDOM
Breaking News (Ireland)

Coronation Street star Bill Roache today said he was “very sorry” over his controversial comments on the victims of paedophiles which seemed to suggest they were being punished for past sins.

Roache, 80, who has played Ken Barlow in the ITV soap for more than 50 years, had told New Zealand’s One News that the public should not be judgmental but be “totally forgiving” of people who have committed child sex crimes.

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ARG – New pope helps convicted predator priest walk free, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivirs Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on March 19, 2013

A convicted pedophile priest walks free now in Argentina thanks in part to Pope Francis’ intervention, according to today’s Washington Post.

We call on the new pontiff to:
–immediately put this child molesting cleric at a remote, secure, independent treatment and housing facility so kids will be safer and
–explain why he’s helping a proven predator avoid jail and live across the street from the charity where he assaulted at least three kids.

Today’s Post reports that “church officials, led by Bergolio, commissioned a lengthy private report arguing that Fr. Julio Cesar Grassi was innocent”(after he had been convicted in a criminal trial). And “prosecutors say the document has helped Grassi avoid jail time so far.” He continues to live “across the street from the classroom and dormitories of Happy Children,” the charity where he molested.

“Bergoglio was widely viewed as close to the young priest,” the Post report says.

The new pope has, through his actions, recklessly and callously helped a dangerous man avoid jail and remain around children. If he believes Fr. Grassi is innocent and the prosecutor, judge and Washington Post all have this wrong, Pope Francis owes his flock – in Argentina and worldwide – a serious explanation.

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Pastor says let God judge accusers

TEXAS
Associated Baptist Press

By Bob Allen

The pastor of a Texas Baptist megachurch, questioned about the handling of a staff member 24 years ago who was recently convicted of sex crimes in another state, noted in his Sunday sermon March 17 that Jesus didn’t answer his accusers during trials before religious and civil authorities 2,000 years ago in Jerusalem.

Former Southern Baptist Convention President Jack Graham, pastor of Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas, said the people bringing charges against Jesus weren’t really interested in the truth because they had already made up their minds that he was going to be crucified.

“What a testimony to all of us when we are accused,” Graham said, “when you are accused unjustly or falsely or slandered or lied about.”

“It’s always easy to want to strike back and speak the truth,” Graham said. “Peter would tell us later, like Jesus was reviled and forsaken, like a lamb, so should we in the spirit of Jesus never respond to slanders and lies and accusations, but rather in the spirit and the humility of Christ to be silent and let God be the judge.”

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Radikaler Neubeginn in Rom?

ROM
Publik-Forum

Wird Jorge Mario Bergoglio ein anderer Mensch? Der Argentinier auf dem Papststuhl orientiert sich am heiligen Franz von Assisi. Das ist ein hoher Anspruch. Er ist schwer einzulösen – mit der Vergangenheit im Gepäck

Wer sich als Papst Franziskus nennt, darf nicht herrschen – sofern er es ehrlich meint mit seiner Verehrung des heiligen Franz von Assisi. Das hat der Jesuitenkardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio verstanden, als er sich für einen Namen entschied, den bisher kein Papst zu wählen wagte. Wird doch Franziskus von Assisi (1182-1226) als der »zweite Christus« verehrt; so rein und lauter war sein Leben, so radikal wollte er dem armen und gewaltfreien Jesus von Nazareth entsprechen. Es könnte wie eine Blasphemie erscheinen, wenn diesem zweiten Christus jetzt ein päpstliches Gesicht gegeben wird. In den ersten Tagen seines Pontifikates macht der Papst seinem Namenspatron alle Ehre: Er verzichtet auf prunkvolle Gewänder und die eleganten roten Schuhe; nach dem ersten Sonntagsgottesdienst verabschiedet er sich per Handschlag von den Gläubigen; er segnet – franziskanisch als Freund der Tiere – einen Blindenhund; er lässt sich von den begeisterten Menschen umarmen. Der Papst liebt wie Franziskus die einfache Rede ohne intellektuelle Höhenflüge; er macht Scherze, redet frei, ohne gestanzte Formeln. Dem Volk nahe sein, die Herzen der einfachen Leute gewinnen, das ist sein Ziel. Denn er steht unter Druck. Er muss förmlich und vehement um Sympathie werben und das menschfreundliche Gesicht der römisch-katholischen Kirche zeigen.

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Vorwürfe weiter zurückgegangen

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Wurzburg

Professor Dr. Klaus Laubenthal, Ansprechpartner in der Diözese Würzburg für Opfer sexuellen Missbrauchs, legt dritte Jahresbilanz vor – Erneut Abschaffung der Verjährung bei sexuellem Missbrauch von Kindern gefordert

Würzburg (POW) Die Zahl der Vorwürfe wegen sexueller Missbrauchshandlungen und Grenzüberschreitungen ist im zurückliegenden Jahr im Bistum Würzburg erneut zurückgegangen. Insgesamt wurden in der Zeit seit 20. März 2012 an Professor Dr. Klaus Laubenthal, Ansprechpartner in der Diözese Würzburg für Opfer sexuellen Missbrauchs, neun Vorwürfe übermittelt. Im Jahr zuvor waren es insgesamt noch 14 Vorwürfe. „Die Aufarbeitung des Missbrauchsgeschehens halte ich im Bistum Würzburg für vorbildlich“, sagte Laubenthal am Dienstag, 19. März, in Würzburg. Die dritte Jahresbilanz seiner Tätigkeit übermittelte Laubenthal an Bischof Dr. Friedhelm Hofmann und Generalvikar Dr. Karl Hillenbrand.

Im zurückliegenden Jahr kamen die Mitteilungen an Laubenthal aus kirchlichen Kreisen oder von den betroffenen Personen selbst. Drei der neun Anschuldigungen bezogen sich auf Priester aus anderen Bistümern beziehungsweise auf die Tätigkeit Würzburger Diözesanpriester in anderen Diözesen. Ein Vorwurf stellte sich als physische Misshandlung dar. Von den fünf zu prüfenden Vorwürfen waren drei Priester betroffen – einer ist bereits gestorben –, ein Ordensmann sowie ein nebenamtlicher Mesner. Bei dem Vorwurf gegen den Mesner kam es schließlich zu einer strafgerichtlichen Verurteilung.

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Care for others, care for creation… St. Francis redivivus!

UNITED STATES
dotCommonweal

March 19, 2013, 9:37 am

Posted by Michael Peppard

The words kept recycling. Care for others … care for creation … care for others … care for creation…

The homily of Pope Francis at his installation Mass this morning stunned me first into disbelief, then into self-reflection, then into joy and hope. Even if he had not already told us which namesake he chose, today there would be no doubt. This opening homily was St. Francis redivivus!

Building off the image of St. Joseph as a “protector,” through “unfailing presence and utter fidelity, even when he finds it hard to understand,” Pope Francis elaborated the vocation of the protector:

The vocation of being a “protector”, however, is not just something involving us Christians alone; it also has a prior dimension which is simply human, involving everyone. It means protecting all creation, the beauty of the created world, as the Book of Genesis tells us and as Saint Francis of Assisi showed us. It means respecting each of God’s creatures and respecting the environment in which we live. It means protecting people, showing loving concern for each and every person, especially children, the elderly, those in need, who are often the last we think about. It means caring for one another in our families: husbands and wives first protect one another, and then, as parents, they care for their children, and children themselves, in time, protect their parents. It means building sincere friendships in which we protect one another in trust, respect, and goodness. In the end, everything has been entrusted to our protection, and all of us are responsible for it. Be protectors of God’s gifts!

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Boots, biscuits and the Prestonwood scandal

TEXAS
Stop Baptist Predators

In Texas, we’ve got a saying: “You can put your boots in the oven, but that don’t make ‘em biscuits.”

That’s what I keep wanting to tell officials at Prestonwood Baptist Church in Dallas, as I watch them trying to alter the reality of the clergy sex abuse cover-up scandal that’s engulfing them.

When Chris Tynes’ questions were deleted from Prestonwood’s Facebook page, he scheduled an appointment with one of the church’s ministers. As reported by WFAA News in Dallas, Tynes had “discovered that a former music minister admitted to sexual misconduct with young boys while at Prestonwood Baptist Church more than twenty years ago.”

“Sexual misconduct?” You can see from the get-go the sort of minimizing slant that reporter is going to take. We’re talking about a minister who committed sex crimes against children. Some of his crimes are detailed in this court document; they include the molestation, digital penetration, and oral rape of young boys.

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Text of Pope Francis’ homily

VATICAN CITY
CNN

Homily of the Holy Father at the Inauguration of his Papal Ministry

19 March 2013

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

I thank the Lord that I can celebrate this Holy Mass for the inauguration of my Petrine ministry on the solemnity of Saint Joseph, the spouse of the Virgin Mary and the patron of the universal Church. It is a significant coincidence, and it is also the name-day of my venerable predecessor: we are close to him with our prayers, full of affection and gratitude.

I offer a warm greeting to my brother cardinals and bishops, the priests, deacons, men and women religious, and all the lay faithful. I thank the representatives of the other Churches and ecclesial Communities, as well as the representatives of the Jewish community and the other religious communities, for their presence. My cordial greetings go to the Heads of State and Government, the members of the official Delegations from many countries throughout the world, and the Diplomatic Corps.

In the Gospel we heard that “Joseph did as the angel of the Lord commanded him and took Mary as his wife” (Mt 1:24). These words already point to the mission which God entrusts to Joseph: he is to be the custos, the protector. The protector of whom? Of Mary and Jesus; but this protection is then extended to the Church, as Blessed John Paul II pointed out: “Just as Saint Joseph took loving care of Mary and gladly dedicated himself to Jesus Christ’s upbringing, he likewise watches over and protects Christ’s Mystical Body, the Church, of which the Virgin Mary is the exemplar and model” (Redemptoris Custos, 1).

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Simplicity and compassion front and center

VATICAN CITY
John Thavis

How does Pope Francis understand “papal power”?

He answered that question today with these words: “lowly, concrete and faithful service.”

At an inaugural Mass rich in traditional symbols of the papal office, attended by hundreds of secular and religious leaders from around the world, Pope Francis told the world that his role would be that of a protector – especially of “the poorest, the weakest, the least important.”

His words confirmed what has already become a new papal style, one that favors the common touch over formal ceremony, and humility over authority.

The pope’s day began with a long ride in an open jeep through St. Peter’s Square. What struck me was that the pontiff, smiling and giving a thumbs-up, seemed to be connecting with individuals in the crowd.

As I watched on a monitor from the ABC News platform, I saw the pope’s jeep suddenly stop. Francis got out of the vehicle, walked over to the barricades and kissed a disabled man. It was a brief moment in a long day, but one that will remain in people’s memory.

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What Did Pope Francis Really Do During The “Dirty War”?

The Global Mail

By Nick Olle
March 19, 2013

On March 13, at a dinner with the cardinals who had just elected him as the new pontiff, Pope Francis quipped, “May God forgive you for what you have done.” When just two days later the Holy See publicly defended the pontiff — against accusations of complicity in human-rights abuses — men of lesser faith might have looked back at the Pope’s joke with suspicion.

No sooner had Pope Francis first appeared on the balcony of St Peter’s Basilica than whispers of his having had a shady past began circulating. As whispers tend to do, they multiplied and the story spread like wildfire around the globe. The Catholic Church has enough problems, people began to say, how could it fail so badly in its background checks?

Where had this story come from?

It dates back more than three decades to Argentina’s so-called “dirty war”; the 1976 to 1983 military dictatorship that killed an estimated 30,000 people. The most serious allegation against Father Jorge Mario Bergoglio (as Pope Francis was known until last week) is that in May 1976 he allowed the junta to abduct two Jesuit priests, Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics. According to Bergoglio’s chief accuser, Argentine journalist Horacio Verbitsky, he withdrew protection from the two men, effectively enabling the junta to kidnap and torture them.

Verbitsky’s claim is based on conversations with Fr Jalics, who was released along with Fr Yorio after five months in captivity. In a statement released by the German Jesuit order where Fr Jalics now works, he said: “Under the assumption that we also had something to do with the guerrillas we were arrested … I cannot comment on the role of Fr Bergoglio in these events.” He added that he was now “reconciled” with the events and wished Pope Francis well.

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Dublin priest says Pope criticism “unfair”

IRELAND
Irish Times

Mon, Mar 18, 2013

Joanne Hunt

An Irish priest who worked under Pope Francis in Argentina has said allegations that he did not do enough to help victims of the military junta were “unfair”.

The claims relate to 1976 when the then Fr Bergoglio was Jesuit provincial in Argentina and two priests were kidnapped by the military. Released after five months, it is alleged he did not do enough to help free them.

Fr John O’Connor, now parish priest of Shankill, worked in Buenos Aires from 1973 for 31 years. He says the new Pope, his superior at that time, was “wonderful at defending priests”.

Not yet a bishop at the time of the kidnappings, Fr O’Connor said of Fr Bergoglio: “Was there anything he could have done, number one, and what did he actually do? What he could have done is speak out and look for them and according to him, that’s what he did.”

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Has Pope Francis Been Soft on Priest Child Sex Abusers?

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

How did reportedly 90 out of 115 Cardinals find a Cardinal like Pope Francis to clean up the child sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church? Is he a mountain mover? After all, many, if not most, of these Cardinals actively condoned or passively acquiesced for decades in the Vatican’s worldwide cover-up of predatory priests.

It does not appear, however, that Pope Francis had earlier distinguised himself either as a senior Latin American bishop by condemning Fr. Maciel’s blatant abuses over many years, nor as a Jesuit has he seemingly to date clearly spoken out on the well reported extensive abuse of Native American children by some Jesuits.

The Washington Post has now reported that Pope Francis’ record in Buenos Aires on dealing with priests who abused children disappointlingly does not appear much different than many of his episcopal brethren who have been widely criticized. Please see, “Pope Francis Was Often Quiet On Argentine Sex Abuse Cases as Archbishop”, accessible at:

[Washington Post]

Pope Francis now has a unique, perhaps last, chance to try to redeem his record, and that of so many other Cardinals and Bishops worldwide. Catholics hope and pray he will, but Catholics need to be realistic and not assume Pope Francis will act, unless the Catholic hierarchy continues to be pressed hard by political leaders and government prosecutors to do so.

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Viewpoint: A proportionate view of the Magdalen laundries

IRELAND
Independent Catholic News

Last Friday night’s God Slot on RTÉ radio broadcast an interview with two nuns who had worked in Magdalene homes. This was the first interview of its kind and the nuns granted it on condition of anonymity because they were scared of the backlash that would follow if their names became public. Clerical Whispers writes:

The nuns had main four main points:

The first was that Ireland during the era of the Magdalen homes was extremely poor and this must be taken into account when assessing the place of the laundries in Irish society.

The second was that women who fell outside society’s norms were more harshly treated than men.

The third was that women ended up in the Magdalen homes for a variety of reasons, and the fourth was that the homes are being judged by a very anti-Catholic media.

So, how poor was Ireland in the middle part of the last century?

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Two Victory Christian employees get jail time after pleading no contest to not reporting child abuse

TULSA (OK)
Tulsa World

By JERRY WOFFORD World Staff Writer
Published: 3/19/2013

Two of three Victory Christian Center employees who pleaded no contest to a charge of failing to report child abuse will spend time in jail.

Paul Howard Willemstein, Anna Alisa George and Harold Frank Sullivan entered the no-contest pleas on Monday. The three had waived their right to a jury trial last month.

Tulsa County Special Judge Bill Hiddle found each of them guilty of the misdemeanor charge.

Willemstein, 33, and George, 24, both assistant youth pastors at the 17,000-member Tulsa megachurch, were ordered to spend 30 days in jail, with the remainder of their one-year terms suspended. They were led from the courtroom in handcuffs by Tulsa County sheriff’s deputies.

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DATELINE ROME

UNITED STATES
Berger’s Beat

March 18, 2013 Author: Jerry Berger
On the very day that Pope Francis is installed in Rome, a mere four subway stops away from St. Peter’s Square, at Cinema Barberini, the Rome opening of “Mea Maxima Culpa” will be held. It’s a documentary by Alex Gibney about hundreds of deaf boys from a Milwaukee Catholic school who seek justice against Catholic officials for the horrendous abuses they suffered at the hands of the now-deceased Fr. Lawrence Murphy. Gibney, who also did “Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room” (which was nominated in 2005 for Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature) and “Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzerr” (short-listed in 2011 for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature) is in Rome for the debut and introduced our town’s David Clohessy of SNAP today at a news conference promoting the film.

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Lessons from Ireland’s sex abuse coverups

AUSTRALIA
ABC

[with audio]

It has been announced that the Australian royal commission into the handling of child sex abuse will hold its first public sitting in early April.

In the following weeks and months survivors of child sexual abuse will begin to tell their stories.

A similar series of inquiries rocked Ireland over the past decade.

To say the least the scope of the Australian commission is huge in comparison, ranging from government agencies, religious organisations and schools to foster care and sports clubs.

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Former Associate Pastor of West Suburban Community Church Charged With Sexual Assault

ILLINOIS
Patch

By Karen Chadra

March 18, 2013

The former associate pastor at West Suburban Community Church in Elmhurst was arrested Monday, March 18, and charged with 11 counts of criminal sexual assault and two counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse, according to a press release from Elmhurst police.

Darin L. Evans, 41, of 2481 Short St., Dover, Ohio, turned himself in to Elmhurst Police detectives Monday morning, the release states. He is scheduled to appear in DuPage County Court for a bond hearing on Tuesday, March 19.

Elmhurst Police detectives were notified last month of the abuse, which allegedly occurred between 2004 and 2006.

Jim Lennon, pastor West Suburban Church, 825 N. Van Auken, shocked his congregation Feb. 24 by reading a letter of confession from Evans that described a sexual relationship with an underage girl. As associate pastor of West Suburban, one of Evans’ responsibilities was to oversee the youth ministry, Lennon said.

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Former Elmhurst church pastor from Villa Park charged with aggravated sexual abuse

ILLINOIS
My Suburban Life

By ED MCMENAMIN – emcmenamin@shawmedia.com
Created: Monday, March 18, 2013

ELMHURST — A former Villa Park man who served as a pastor in Elmhurst is facing 11 counts of criminal sexual assault and two counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse after turning himself in to police.

Elmhurst police charged Darin L. Evans, 41, of Dover, Ohio, on Monday. Evans is a former associate pastor of West Suburban Community Church in Elmhurst.
In February, Elmhurst police detectives were notified of the alleged abuse that occurred between 2004 and 2006.

A senior pastor at the church had read a letter of confession from Evans to the congregation last month, according to media reports. Evans wrote the letter after the alleged victim told church leaders about Evan’s alleged sexual conduct.

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Former Elmhurst pastor charged with sexual abuse

ELMHURST (IL)
The Doings Oak Brook

Updated: March 18, 2013

ELMHURST — A former associate pastor at an Elmhurst church was arrested Monday and charged with criminal sexual assault and abuse.

Darin L. Evans, 41, of Dover, Ohio, was charged Monday with 11 counts of criminal sexual assault and two counts of aggravated criminal sexual assault, Elmhurst police said in a news release.

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March 18, 2013

Pope Francis may send Cardinal Bernard Law back to Boston

ROME/BOSTON (MA)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY MICHAEL SNEED msneed@suntimes.com March 18, 2013

Back to Boston?

Law’s flaw: Sneed hears rumbles that Cardinal Bernard Law, the most vilified American cardinal in the U.S. pedophile priest probe — who has been living in Rome since 2004 — may find himself doing penance publicly in Boston.

◆To wit: Sneed hears whispers that Law, who was forced to resign as archbishop of Boston in 2002 after it was revealed he was engaged in a clerical sexual abuse cover-up — and now lives in a fourth-century basilica in Rome — may be given a new job by a new pope.

◆The new job? Sneed is told Law may become a “vehicle for healing/public atonement” in the priest scandal, which has rocked the foundations of a church now led by Pope Francis.

◆Backshot: The Massachusetts attorney general declined to pursue cover-up charges against Law in 2003 — but Law’s move to the safety of Rome drew international criticism.

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Pope Francis was often quiet …

ARGENTINA
Washington Post

Pope Francis was often quiet on Argentine sex abuse cases as archbishop

By Nick Miroff

Updated: Monday, March 18

HURLINGHAM, Argentina — Father Julio Cesar Grassi was a celebrity in the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires. The young, dynamic, media-savvy priest networked with wealthy Argentines to fund an array of schools, orphanages and job training programs for poor and abandoned youths, winning praise from Argentine politicians and his superior, Archbishop Jorge Mario Bergoglio.

Grassi called his foundation Felices los Niños, “Happy Children.”

Today, Grassi is a convicted sex offender who remains free on a conditional release after being sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2009 for molesting a prepubescent boy in his care.

Yet in the years after Grassi’s conviction, Bergoglio — now Pope Francis — has declined to meet with the victim of the priest’s crimes or the victims of other predations by clergy under his leadership. He did not offer personal apologies or financial restitution, even in cases in which the crimes were denounced by other members of the church and the offending priests were sent to jail.

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In 2012 interview, Cardinal Bergoglio says he favors keeping celibacy

ARGENTINA
Alateia

The formation of priests was one of Jorge Bergoglio’s (now Pope Francis) constant concerns when he was Archbishop and Superior in the Society of Jesus. He had a conversation on the subject with Rabbi Abraham Skorka, rector of the Latin American Rabbinical Seminary. This conversation appears in the book Sobre el Cielo y la Tierra (“On the Heavens and the Earth”) published in 2012 by the Sudamericana publishing company.

The following is an excerpt of that dialogue, in which then-Cardinal Bergoglio reveals the secret to living celibacy happily:

Bergoglio: When I was a seminarian, I was dazzled by a girl I met at an uncle’s wedding. I was surprised by her beauty, her intellectual brilliance… and, well, I was bowled over for quite a while. I kept thinking and thinking about her. When I returned to the seminary after the wedding, I could not pray for over a week because when I tried to do so, the girl appeared in my head. I had to rethink what I was doing. I was still free because I was a seminarian, so I could have gone back home and that was it. I had to think about my choice again. I chose again – or let myself be chosen by – the religious path. It would be abnormal for this kind of thing not to happen.

When this happens, one has to get one’s bearings again. It’s a matter of one choosing again or saying, “No, what I’m feeling is very beautiful. I am afraid I won’t be faithful to my commitment later on, so I’m leaving the seminary.” When something like this happens to a seminarian, I help him go in peace to be a good Christian and not a bad priest. In the Western Church to which I belong, priests cannot be married as in the Byzantine, Ukrainian, Russian or Greek Catholic Churches. In those Churches, the priests can be married, but the bishops have to be celibate. They are very good priests. Sometimes I joke with them and tell them that they have wives at home but they did not realize that they also got a mother-in-law as part of the bargain. In Western Catholicism, some organizations are pushing for more discussion about the issue. For now, the discipline of celibacy stands firm. Some say, with a certain pragmatism, that we are losing manpower. If, hypothetically, Western Catholicism were to review the issue of celibacy, I think it would do so for cultural reasons (as in the East), not so much as a universal option.

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Polito’s Take: On bended knee

BOSTON (MA)
My Fox Boston

Posted: Mar 18, 2013

(FOX25 / MyFoxBoston) Jim Polito, FOX 25 Commentator

As I write this blog, I am kneeling and praying that Cardinal Bernard Law will be banished to a cloistered monastery for the rest of his life. For those of you who don’t know what cloistered means, a cloistered monastery is a humble existence, lots of silence, and no gourmet Italian meals. It’s like being sent to your room by God.

Cardinal Law resigned as Archbishop of Boston in 2002, after being accused of covering up for pedophile priests. Despite the scandal, he returned to the Vatican and was appointed to an honorary position at the Basilica Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome. This added insult to injury for victims of clergy abuse.

Cardinal Law has retired, but he still lives in a luxury apartment in the cathedral complex. Last week, Pope Francis visited the cathedral. According to the Italian newspaper Il Fatto Quotidiano, Cardinal Law was in the cathedral to watch the Pope pray. But when Pope Francis recognized him, he immediately ordered that Law be removed. He went on to say, “He is not to come to this church anymore.” The Vatican has since denied this report.

I hope the Italian newspaper is correct. Maybe there’s a new approach by Pope Francis and the Vatican to pedophile priests and the church hierarchy who covered for them. Cardinal Bernard Law is just as guilty as any pedophile priest. He may not have touched a child, but he’s done just as much evil. He should spend every day begging for forgiveness, praying for it, and living a monastic existence. Remember Cardinal, when you heard confessions and told people to go kneel in a pew and say 10 Hail Mary’s and an Act of Contrition? Did you accept the sacrament of confession following your resignation?

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Perceptive commentary: O’Grady, Douthat, Bottum, Allen, Erlandson

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler | March 18, 2013

The election of Pope Francis produced an explosion of media commentary, and I cannot pretend that I have read more than a small portion of the editorials that appeared immediately after the historic choice of a Pontiff from the New World. But in the past few a few commentaries have struck me as particular worthwhile:

•Mary Anastasia O’Grady, who covers Latin America for the Wall Street Journal, looks Behind the Campaign to Smear the Pope. Alert readers may have noticed that nearly all the stories about the alleged failure of Cardinal Bergoglio to oppose the military dictatorship in Argentina cite a single journalist: Horacio Verbitsky, a former member of the Montoneros guerillas who fought that regime, now a left-wing journalist. More balanced witnesses testify in the Pope’s favor. For example, 1980 Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel says that “there were bishops that were complicit with the dictatorship, but Bergoglio, no.” One opponent of the regime reports that while she was in hiding, she “ate with Bergoglio.” The bitter opponents of the Pope, O’Grady reports, are “those trying to turn Argentina into the next Venezuela.”

•Ross Douthat of the New York Times wonders whether Pope Francis is What the Church Needs Now. The new Pope commands respect for his simplicity, humility, and integrity, Douthat writes. That is particularly important at a time when so many people have ceased to respect the beliefs that the Church teaches. Pope Francis insists that God wants something from us, in contrast to the popular culture that would “dismiss the idea that the divine could possibly want anything for us except for what we already want for ourselves.”

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Vatican Financial Oversight Director: ‘Church Strengthens Position By Combating Money Laundering’

VATICAN CITY
Spiegel

René Brülhart, 40, has been the director of the Vatican’s Financial Information Authority (FIA) for nearly half a year. The Swiss lawyer and former head of Liechtenstein’s financial intelligence unit is on a mission to clear the Vatican Bank of all suspicions of money laundering and other illegal financial transactions.

SPIEGEL: Mr. Brülhart, are you partly responsible for Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation?

Brülhart: That does not fall within my area of responsibility. Why do you ask?

SPIEGEL: The first resignation of a pope in centuries has sparked widespread speculation. For instance, there is conjecture that the pope had to resign because he pushed for more transparency at the Institute for Works of Religion (IOR), commonly known as the Vatican Bank, and strove to clear it of all suspicions of money laundering. That is your job.

Brülhart: Let’s allow conspiracy theories to simply remain conspiracy theories. Only the Holy Father emeritus knows the ultimate reasons for his resignation. It has nothing to do with my work.

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State senators unveil child protection law overhaul

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS 21

Reported by: Kirk Wilson
Email: KirkWilson@cbs21.com
Contributor: Rachel Snody

The first comprehensive overhaul of the state’s child protection laws, since Jerry Sandusky ‘s arrest and conviction, was unveiled on Monday. The sixteen bill package was introduced by a bipartisan group of state senators.

As the Jerry Sandusky saga went from rumor to arrest to conviction, flaws in the state laws became apparent. The General Assembly created a special task force on child protection to address the shortcomings.

The special task force met numerous times across the state last year taking testimony. In November, the group released a report and from those recommendations, came the legislation to implement them.

The proposals would update the definition of child abuse, clarify who must report child abuse, increase penalties for failure to report and establish a three-digit, statewide number for reporting child abuse.

Another provision would provide whistleblower protection, said Senator Bob Mensch. “I think we need to be able to remove these structures that allow someone with knowledge to be able to come forward, and be sure they’re not going to have consequences. You can’t always see the aftermath of child abuse, but when you see it happening such as coach McQueary, he should feel welcome to come forward and be able to report that.”

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Deetman meldde belastende feiten bisschop Van Luyn niet

NEDERLAND
NRC

door Robert Chesal en Joep Dohmen

Wim Deetman heeft in zijn eindrapport over het kindermisbruik in de Rooms-Katholieke Kerk zijn opdrachtgever, bisschop Ad van Luyn, ontzien. Belastende feiten over de toenmalige hoogste kerkleider in Nederland werden niet vermeld, schrijft NRC Handelsblad vandaag. Andere negatieve informatie is slechts omfloerst weergegeven, met weglating van de naam van Van Luyn.

Van Luyn was tijdens het onderzoek van Deetman voorzitter van de bisschoppenconferentie. Hij zocht, volgens kerkelijke bronnen, persoonlijk Deetman aan om het onderzoek te doen en ondertekende ook de opdracht aan de commissie-Deetman. Deze rondde deze week zijn onderzoeksopdracht af met een tweede, aanvullend rapport over vrouwen en meisjes die mishandeld en misbruikt zijn.

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Pennsylvania Senate introduces 16-bill proposal to reform child protection laws

PENNSYLVANIA
The Patriot-News

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com
on March 18, 2013

A bipartisan group of state senators on Monday unveiled a package of legislation that would reform Pennsylvania’s child protection laws.

The 16-bill package would provide a broad sweep of reform, including updating the definition of child abuse, perpetrator and mandatory reporter. The legislation would also update procedures used to report child abuse, including reporting guidelines for medical practitioners and school employees.

The proposed legislation would implement changes recommended by the Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection, which was convened in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child sexual abuse case.

Sen. Kim Ward (R-39), said the current laws addressing child abuse had been “in the books for a long time,” and that changing times called for an overhaul to the state law. She said the task force found the current law to be “vague, confusing and focused on perpetrators.”

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A new pope doesn’t mean we can rest

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on March 18, 2013

We’ve talked a lot since the election of Pope Francis about how he has an enormous duty to protect kids and help prevent future sex abuse. But just because there is a new Pope doesn’t mean we can give church officials who have previously covered up crimes against children any slack.

And that is why, regardless of Francis’ actions, our case at the ICC will proceed.

So far, in the year and a half since we first launched our case, we’ve learned that the crimes and cover ups are indeed current and global, and that victims across the world will step forward, if they believe that somehow their courage will result in greater safety for kids.

Knowing that this is the case, our attention now turns to those who work within the church itself. If some of those within the church who had information could come forward, this case could result in even more victims finding their voice and more crimes being exposed.

Whistleblowers play an important role, and especially with dealing with crimes in powerful institutions like the church. We will not stop seeking these whistleblowers just because Pope Benedict has stepped down. On the contrary, we will push harder for them.

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SPEAK OUT? OR SHUT UP?

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on how two bicoastal newspapers are reporting on Pope Francis and the so-called Dirty War:

No sooner had Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio been elected Pope Francis when the Los Angeles Times started reporting on his alleged “timidity” in fighting Argentina’s dictatorship during the Dirty War, 1976 to 1983. The newspaper also cited the rap that he was “too quiet” during this period. Similarly, the New York Times is saying that the pope is being accused of “knowing about abuses and failing to do enough to stop them.” What is particularly striking about today’s front-page story on this issue—the pope “faces his own entanglement with the Dirty War”—is that it took four journalists in four different nations to work on it.

Anyone who thinks these newspapers want a more vocal Catholic Church would be wrong: it totally depends on the issue.

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Victory Christian Center employees appear in court on Monday

TULSA (OK)
Fox 23

Three people accused of failing to report child abuse at Victory Christian Center have court dates on Monday afternoon.

Anna George, Harold Sullivan and Paul Williemstein, all VCC employees, are accused of waiting weeks before reporting they received a complaint against a former employee, Chris Denman, involving an underage girl. In December, Denman pleaded guilty to sex crimes against three girls and was sentenced to 55 years in prison.

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Three Victory Christian Center employees due in court today

TULSA (OK)
Tulsa World

By JERRY WOFFORD World Staff Writer
Published: 3/18/2013

Three Victory Christian Center employees are due in court Monday afternoon after they waived their right to a jury trial last month.

Paul Howard Willemstein, Anna Alisa George and Harold Frank Sullivan are each charged with one count of failure to report child abuse. They have previously entered pleas of not guilty, but after waving the jury trial could change their plea and face sentencing Monday.

John and Charica Daugherty, son and daughter-in-law of Victory Christian Senior Pastor Sharon Daugherty, were also charged with one count each of failure to report child abuse. They are set for a jury trial sounding docket on May 10.

The maximum penalty for the misdemeanor charge is up to a year in jail.

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“Bergoglio is completely innocent,” says Argentina’s Supreme Court

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

Today Bergoglio met with Argentina’s President, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner who stated: “Never in my life has a pope kissed me!”

Vatican Insider staff
Rome

Today, the President of the Argentine Supreme Court of Justice, Ricardi Lorenzetti said that pope Francis “is completely innocent” and was never suspected of being involved in violations of human rights committed during the military dictatorship (1976-83).

“Although some people disagree or claim that he may have done this or that, the fact remains that there is no concrete accusation” against former cardinal Jorge Bergoglio, Lorenzetti said in a radio interview.

The President of the High Court stressed the need to respect the principle of innocence, even in Pope Francis’ case, adding that “this is a man who has never been convicted” of violations during the dictatorship.

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Sex assault trial date set for Priest

CANADA
Quinte News

A trial date has been set for a former Tyendinaga Township priest accused of sexual assault.

Father Rene Labelle was charged last year, following an alleged incident in the summer of 2004.

Labelle will be in front of a Kingston judge March 27th.

Labelle was the former pastor of Saint Charles Borromeo Church in Read, in the late 80′s and early 90′s and also served as a chaplain in Kingston at Holy Cross Secondary.

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Pope Francis, ex-Pope Ratzinger and President Obama

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Pope Francis will soon meet with the ex-Pope, but not with President Obama who is skipping the papal installation. Is Francis even willing to have the ex-Pope as his next door neighbor at the Vatican and to continue to rely jointly on his closest aide, Georg Ganswein? Is Francis planning to continue the ex-Pope’s anti-contraception insurance crusade to undercut President Obama’s health insurance plan that mainly helps the poor?

As to ex-Pope Ratzinger, it is difficult to see how Francis would be helped by having the ex-Pope living so close. If the ex-Pope stayed at Castel Gondolfo, he would have the same legal immunity claim under the Lateran Treaty and comfortable quarters. Francis could call him or even see him at any time, without the image of the old boss hanging around. For similar reasons, continuing with Georg as a daily assistant to both of them raises related issues.

The obvious split reportedly among Vatican Cardinals about Ratzinger’s evident preferred candidate, Cardinal Scola, suggests strongly that Ratzinger’s presence at the Vatican would be more negative than positive. The secret Vatican dossier reportedly on sexual and financial scandals similarly will likely suggest that Ratzinger’s daily presence would only be a reminder of a saga Francis will be trying hard to get behind him promptly. Two Popes are one too many!

The reported large margin of votes that Francis received at the recent papal election Conclave, compared to Ratzinger’s presumably favored candidate, make clear that Francis does not need Ratzinger holding his hand to establish Francis’ legitimacy and authority.

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Horror of Horrors: OC’s Two Worst Pedophile Priests Were Pals

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Weekly

By Gustavo Arellano
Mon., Mar. 18 2013

We have long covered the destruction wrought by Eleuterio Ramos, the worst-ever pedophile priest in the history of the Diocese of Orange. But we’ve only occasionally discussed the second-worst: Siegfried Widera, who molested at least nine children and most likely many more.

And now, a horrifying prospect has emerged: Widera and Ramos probably molested together, or at the very least coordinated, because not only did they know of each other, but they were good friends.

I first became aware of this in a comment left on my latest exposé of former Bishop Tod D. Brown, left by an eyewitness who saw this between 1982 and 1984.

“They used to sit with my friends’ grandparents that ran the sausage booth and get drunk,” at St. Justin Martyr in Anaheim, according to the commenter. “Even after Widera ‘was removed’ from St. Justin, he still was there for special events and shit just to rape kids after school. No one stopped Widera from abusing.”

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Suchen weitere Betroffene von Übergriffen im Cecilienstift

DEUTSCHLAD
netzwerkB

Suchen weitere Betroffene von Übergriffen im Cecilienstift, Bad Lippspringe (1960-1980)

Auf diesem Wege suchen wir andere ehemalige Heim- und Verschickungskinder, die damals im Cecilienstift in Bad Lippspringe untergebracht waren und dort, wie wir, sexuelle Übergriffe und/oder Gewalt erlebt haben.

Wir, zwei Betroffene (Kirsten, 49, und Bernd, 56), haben durch einen Aufruf im Email-Verteiler von Frau Michaela Huber und dank der Aufmerksamkeit einer Dame vom Frauennotruf Lübeck, vor Kurzem Kontakt miteinander aufnehmen können. Wir empfinden den Austausch über das Erlebte als entlastend und bereichernd.Unsere Email-Adressen / Telefonnummern könnt Ihr über das netzwerkB erfahren unter: info@netzwerkb.org

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Ermittlungsbemühungen der Staatsanwaltschaft Bonn

DEUTSCHLAND
Jesuiten ICAC

Den folgenden Kommentar von Herrn Wenzel zur Staatsanwaltschaft Bonn möchten wir als neuen Beitrag zur Verfügung stellen. Nach unseren Informationen sind sämtliche Ermittlungen wegen unterschiedlichster Sachverhalte (Besitz/Weitergabe Kinderpornografie, sexueller Missbrauch Schutzbefohlener, Verleumdung, Betrug, …) mit Bezug zum Aloisiuskolleg von ein und derselben Staatsanwältin durchgeführt und dann eingestellt worden oder ohne Ergebnis geblieben.

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Vic pedophile priest could be out by June

AUSTRALIA
9 News

The victims of one of Australia’s worst pedophiles – defrocked Catholic priest Gerald Ridsdale – want him to appear before the royal commission into child sexual abuse.

It’s believed Risdale, who was sentenced to a maximum of 25 years, but could be released on parole as early as June, molested at least 40 children over three decades.

The Herald Sun says he is being urged to reveal how the church helped cover up his illegal activities before the royal commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“If he started to talk about what he knew, the Catholic church house of cards would come tumbling down,” victim Stephen Woods said.

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Pope Francis pledged to fight for priest kidnapped by junta, 1976 letter reveals

GERMANY
Telegraph

Pope Francis pledged to fight for the release of a Jesuit priest kidnapped by Argentina’s military junta, according to a letter from 1976 which has been disclosed to a German newspaper.

By Jeevan Vasagar, Berlin
1:34PM GMT 18 Mar 2013

The Vatican has fought back against allegations that the new Pope, while a senior Jesuit priest in Argentina, was complicit in the kidnapping and torture of two colleagues, Orlando Yorio and Francisco Jalics, during the country’s “Dirty War”.

Jorge Mario Bergoglio, who was elected the first Latin American pope last Wednesday, is accused of withdrawing the church’s protection from the two men.

It has now emerged that Bergoglio wrote a letter to Father Jalics’ brother, in which he admitted that the two men had disagreements. However, he insisted that he “loved” Fr Jalics.

An extract from the letter said: “I have lobbied the government many times for your brother’s release. So far we have had no success. But I have not lost hope that your brother will soon be released.”

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Ridsdale may reveal abuses

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Editorial
From:Herald Sun
March 18, 2013

ONE of Australia’s worst child predators may become one of the most important witnesses at the royal commission into sex abuse.

According to his victims, Gerald Ridsdale could reveal details of a network of child abusers within the priesthood that did not come out at his trials.

As reported in today’s Herald Sun, Ridsdale was sentenced to a maximum of 25 years, but could be released on parole as early as June.

The now defrocked priest molested at least 40 children over three decades and may be able to provide evidence concerning other predators.

Witnesses have told how Ridsdale, who once shared a house with other priests, including the now Cardinal George Pell, was moved to other parishes when his crimes became known.

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