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.

January 24, 2013

The price of conscience

IRELAND
Irish Times

It is sad but hardly surprising that Tony Flannery should, at this stage of his life, be silenced, removed from ministry and threatened with excommunication. Following on from Vatican II, the Catholic Church’s influence has waned in western societies because of sexual and financial scandals. But a determined effort is now being made by Vatican authorities to impose orthodoxy. Fr Flannery with a number of colleagues and members of the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) are under threat due to their insistence on the importance of personal conscience.

Fr Flannery has written of an era of great openness in the church after Vatican II, when freedom of thought and conscience existed and priests were able to present the message of Christ in a way that addressed the reality of people’s lives. In time, as authority became more centralised in the Vatican, priests were sanctioned, silenced and dismissed because they would not “toe the line”. Orthodoxy was the imperative, he wrote. Allowing people to think for themselves was seen by a significant core of the church as dangerous.

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.

Redemptorists dispute priest’s claim

IRELAND
Irish Times

COLIN GLEESON

The head of Redemptorists in Rome yesterday released a statement in which he expressed his “deep regret” at the recent actions of Irish priest Fr Tony Flannery, and disputed the reasons he has given for his clash with the Vatican.

Fr Flannery told a press conference on Sunday he had been threatened with excommunication by Rome’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) for refusing to recant his more liberal views on church teachings concerning women priests, contraception and homosexuality.

Superior General of the Redemptorists Most Rev Fr Michael Brehl said yesterday however that his “deep regret” at the actions of Fr Flannery related not to these views, but to “some of the writings of Fr Flannery which were ambiguous regarding fundamental areas of Catholic doctrine”.

These “fundamental areas” include “the priesthood, the nature of the Church, and the Eucharist”, said Fr Brehl. “He was instructed to undertake a period of prayer and theological reflection to clarify his positions on these matters.

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.

US judge orders Catholic organisation to release documents

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Irish Examiner

Thursday, January 24, 2013

A US judge ordered the unsealing of documents related to a disgraced Catholic organisation called the Legion of Christ as it faces questions about its relationship to wealthy elderly patrons, but the religious order immediately moved to block it.

Superior Court Judge Michael Silverstein called the public’s right to fully scrutinise the documents “paramount”.

The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Providence Journal and the National Catholic Reporter had asked the judge to unseal the documents, which are from a lawsuit filed by a woman contesting the will of a wealthy aunt who left the Legion of Christ US$60m (€45m).

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.

RI judge orders Legion of Christ papers unsealed

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Wall Street Journal

Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — A judge on Wednesday ordered the unsealing of documents related to a disgraced Roman Catholic organization called the Legion of Christ as it faces questions about its relationship to wealthy elderly patrons, but the religious order immediately moved to block it.

Superior Court Judge Michael Silverstein called the public’s right to fully scrutinize the documents “paramount.”

The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Providence Journal and the National Catholic Reporter had asked the judge to unseal the documents, which are from a lawsuit filed by a woman contesting the will of a wealthy aunt who left the Legion of Christ $60 million. The media organizations’ attorney, Joseph Cavanagh, argued the documents could shed light on the Legion’s operations and there was no justification to seal them.

The Legion, founded in Mexico City in 1941, calls itself a religious congregation of pontifical right and says its mission involves “extending the Kingdom of Christ in society,” according to its website. The Vatican took over the Legion in 2010 after determining that its late founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, had sexually molested seminarians and fathered three children by two women. The Legion has faced other complaints, including one from someone who claims to be one of Maciel’s children.

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.

Key ruling expected Thursday in Archdiocese bankruptcy case

MILWAUKEE (WI)
SNAP Wisconsin

WHO/WHAT
Victim/survivors of childhood sexual abuse by clergy of the Milwaukee Archdiocese, including leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org/SNAPwisconsin.com) will be joined by victim/claimants in the Milwaukee Archdiocese bankruptcy hearing to discuss Judge Susan V. Kelley’s court ruling that may well determine the admissibility or dismissal of the majority of 570 cases filed by victims into the court. At issue is whether the majority of cases, charging the archdiocese with fraud by concealing and transferring known child sex offender clerics, were filed within Wisconsin’s statute of limitations. The ruling, expected in a hearing last month (see details here), was delayed by Kelley until Thursday.

Also discussed will be other recent key developments emerging from the bankruptcy court, including the rejection of the use of the first amendment by Judge Kelly to prohibit the court from examining former Archbishop, now New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan’s controversial and potentially fraudulent transfer of 55 million dollars into a so-called “cemetery trust” to shield assets from victims. And it was discovered last week that top archdiocesan officials for almost two months refused to turn over criminal evidence in a current and active child sex abuse investigation in Fond du Lac, telling law enforcement that Judge Kelley’s bankruptcy court prohibited them from doing so, a patently false claim.

Finally, the archdiocese has filed this week a motion for Kelly to dismiss 157 victim cases because they involve religious order sex offenders, based on the argument that the archdiocese has no responsibility for religious orders, even though most of these individuals must be officially assigned to the archdiocese and can only work in parishes and schools with the direct consent and supervision of the archbishop.

WHEN
Thursday, January 24th. Court hearing is scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m.

WHERE
On the front steps of the Federal Courthouse, 517 E. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, after the hearing.

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.

Newly Released Files on Catholic Church Sex Abuse Scandal

CALIFORNIA
KEYT

Written by Shirin Rajaee

Santa Barbara- Some confidential files released this week on clergy sex abuse in the Los Angeles Archdiocese, reveal ties to at least one prominent local religious figure. For years, the Catholic Church has fought to keep these files secret, but the documents that date back to the 1980’s are revealing. They clearly show how Archbishop Roger M. Mahony and a top adviser, Bishop Thomas Curry, who now presides over the Santa Barbara region plotted to hide child molestation by priests, from reaching the police.

Santa Barbara Attorney, Tim Hale, who represents a number of the 500 abuse victims says that there were discussions in these memos where church leaders would knowingly give the abusive priests out of the area assignments to keep them from being exposed, and kept them from seeing psychologists, in case the therapist alerted police.

Father James Ford who was assigned to many locations in the area, is one of the abusers that Mahony and Curry were covering up for.

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.

‘Unique case’ calls for gov’t ‘intrusion’

LOS ANGELES (CA)
OneNewsNow

Becky Yeh – California correspondent (OneNewsNow.com)
Thursday, January 24, 2013

Concerning the cover-up of sex abuse in the Lost Angeles Archdiocese, a Christian attorney says a little government “intrusion” is necessary to ensure that justice be served.

Prosecutors who were unable to build a case against leaders of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles are now reviewing internal church documents that were recently released. According to the Los Angeles Times, the files show how church leaders protected molester priests and sought to hide information from other church leaders. The documents reveal that retired Cardinal Roger Mahony and church hierarchy failed to discipline pedophile priests, even though they were aware there were other victims.

Bob Tyler of Advocates for Faith & Freedom says this case calls for unusual measures.

“In this case, the victims certainly deserve justice. However, a judge needs to decide whether that includes publicly identifying those individuals who may have known about the abuse but did nothing about it,” he asserts.

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.

Roger Mahony’s Apology for Abuse Cover-Up Not Enough, say Victims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
KCET

Recently discovered letters from the 1980s cast a new and disturbing light on the L.A. Archdiocese and its former archbishop, Cardinal Roger Mahony. They strongly suggest that Mahony actively conspired to keep suspected pedophile priests away from the police, even going so far as to send a priest out of state to elude authorities. Mahony has apologized — again. But now there are fresh calls for prosecution.

Manny Vega of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) tells Madeleine his devastating story of abuse and what he thinks should be the fate of Mahony and the other priests involved in this scandal.

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.

The Release of the Los Angeles Archdiocese’s Records …

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Justia Verdict

[Archive of Los Angeles Archdiocesan Documents – BishopAccountability.org]

Marci A. Hamilton

The Release of the Los Angeles Archdiocese’s Records Relating to Clergy Child Sex Abuse: The Insights It Reveals, and Why the Justice System Deserves Great Credit Here

The Earth moved in Los Angeles recently, without a flicker of the Richter scale. Files of the Los Angeles Archdiocese were released as part of a civil case in which members of the hierarchy were named, and their unforgivable actions described in their own words. These men knew about child-predator priests who gravely harmed dozens, if not hundreds, of victims, and they never once called the police before the year 2000. Instead, they helped one pedophile priest escape the country, suggested sending another to a therapist who was also a lawyer so as to ensure that attorney-client privilege would apply, and let another simply melt into the general population after returning from treatment. The details, reported by The Los Angeles Times,are nauseating.

These files are just the beginning of the earthshaking information still to be released in Los Angeles, as the revelations I have described above are from just one individual case. Soon, the files that were supposed to be released as part of the massive 2007 settlement between 550 survivors and the Archdiocese will also become public. While the Archdiocese pushed hard to have the names of the members of the hierarchy redacted in those files, the press fought back in court and won. Now, these additional files will be also released, and likely will be just as searing as the few just now released.

I know, I know. At this point in history, learning that bishops failed to protect children from priest child predators is something that, to quote Capt. Reynaud in Casablanca, “I’m shocked, shocked to find.” The bigger picture though, is where I would like my reader to look now. The truth about child sex abuse in our culture is pouring in; where did it come from?

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.

Downtown Protest Held Over Alleged Predator Priest

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA

[with video]

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – A priest who once served in the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh is accused in the alleged molestation of a boy in New Hampshire in the 1980s.

Fr. Michael Ledoux was a principal at Serra Catholic High School in McKeesport and pastor of St. Pamphilus in Beechview.

Fr. Ledoux resigned from his post at a university outside Philadelphia after the allegations surfaced.

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

Diocese of Pittsburgh …

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Diocese of Pittsburgh to send letters to 2 parishes after priest accused of abuse in New Hampshire

January 24, 2013

By Ann Rodgers / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Parishioners at two churches and alumni of Serra Catholic High School will receive letters asking whether anyone was harmed by a Franciscan priest who served in the 1990s and is accused of molesting a New Hampshire high school student in the 1980s.

Father Michael Ledoux, 55, was pastor of St. Pamphilus in Beechview from 1993 to 1995, principal of Serra in McKeesport from 1995 to 2000 and said Mass at St. Angela Merici in White Oak in 1999 and 2000, said the Rev. Ronald Lengwin, spokesman for the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh.

“While the allegation was reported to the Diocese of New Hampshire in 2003, the Diocese of Pittsburgh was not informed until recently,” he said. “No allegation was made to us at all while he was in Pittsburgh.”

Father Ledoux has been banned from ministry since the Franciscan Friars of the Province of the Immaculate Conception settled his case in 2002. In 2003, he became dean of secular Widener University near Philadelphia.

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.

Überforderte Ingenbohler Schwestern quälten Zöglinge

SCHWEIZ
Sudostschweiz

Ein unabhängiger Expertenbericht bestätigt, dass Ingenbohler Schwestern zwischen 1928 und 1970 Heimzöglingen Leid zugefügt haben. Der Bericht geht auch auf die miserablen Bedingungen ein, unter denen die Schwestern bis zur Erschöpfung arbeiteten.

Ingenbohl SZ. – Die vom Kloster beauftragte Expertengruppe hat am Mittwoch nach zweijähriger Arbeit ihren Bericht vorgestellt. Auslöser war der 2010 ausgestrahlten Dokumentarfilm «Das Kinderzuchthaus» von Beat Bieri. Darin geht es um die Erziehungsanstalt Rathausen bei Luzern, in der – neben vielen anderen Heimen – Ingenbohler Schwestern tätig waren.

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.

Gericht kippt Verjährung von Missbrauch

OSTERREICH
Kurier

Eine kleine juristische Sensation kündigt sich in Vorarlberg an. Zwei ehemalige Schüler des Klosterinternats Mehrerau in Bregenz haben 2012 wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs durch einen Pater geklagt. Das Kloster hat sich damals auf Verjährung berufen. Dies kommt für das Landesgericht Feldkirch nicht infrage. „Das Gericht hat von der Möglichkeit Gebrauch gemacht, die Verjährungseinrede in beiden Fällen nicht anzunehmen“, sagt Gerichtssprecher Reinhard Flatz.

Die beiden Fälle sind ähnlich gelagert, aber doch von unterschiedlicher juristischer Tragweite. Ein ehemaliger Zögling, 58, gibt an, bereits 1968 im Vorarlberger Eliteinternat von Pater B. sexuell missbraucht worden zu sein. Der andere ehemalige Mehrerau-Schüler, 46, soll 1982 ebenfalls Opfer sexueller Übergriffe durch denselben Pater geworden sein. Im Fall von 1968 liegt ein psychologisches Gutachten vor, dass der Missbrauchte durch die Traumatisierung erst jetzt über die Vorfälle sprechen könne. Im anderen Fall waren die 30 Jahre Verjährungsfrist im Zivilverfahren ohnehin nicht erreicht.

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.

Würzburg: Bischöfe berieten über Eklat um Missbrauchsstudie

DEUTSCHLAND
kathweb

Zum Abschluss des Treffens gab es keine öffentliche Erklärung zur weiteren Vorgehensweise

23.01.2013

München (KAP) Der Ständige Rat der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz (DBK) hat am Dienstagabend seine zweitägige Krisensitzung in Würzburg beendet. Die Aufarbeitung des Missbrauchsskandals nach dem Zerwürfnis der Bischöfe mit dem Kriminologen Christian Pfeiffer stand im Mittelpunkt. Das Thema wird die DBK auch in den nächsten Monaten intensiv beschäftigen. Zum Abschluss des Treffens gab es keine öffentliche Erklärung zur weiteren Vorgehensweise.

Innerhalb der DBK forderte der Eichstätter Bischof Gregor Hanke Selbstkritik. Man müsse sich der Frage stellen, warum man die Probleme, an denen die Zusammenarbeit der Bischöfe mit Pfeiffer letztendlich gescheitert waren, “nicht schon am Anfang” in den Blick genommen habe.

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.

Scholar addresses clerical abuses

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Loyolan

Dr. C. Colt Anderson, the Fordham University Dean of the Graduate School of Religion, presented a talk on “Lessons of History: What Can the Church of the Middle Ages Teach Us about the Modern Sex-Abuse Scandal?” this past Wednesday in Ahmanson Auditorium. He spoke with the Loyolan before the event.

Jenna Andou (JA): If a priest from a century ago learned about the realities of sexual abuse in the Church today, what would they say?

C. Colt Anderson (CA): They would probably say that they had similar problems. If you study Church history, you can see that these problems have always been around – they get worse and they get better.

JA: How would you define modern sexual abuse?

CA: I would use St. Peter Damian’s category – he says that sexual abuse is spiritual incest. It is a similar betrayal, but it is even worse because the priest’s role is supposed to be someone of absolute trust.

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.

Where’s he been?: SNAP traces path of accused friar

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Kathy Mellott kmellott@tribdem.com

JOHNSTOWN — An advocacy group aimed at bringing greater accountability to Catholic church leaders in dealing with child sexual abuse by priests is mapping where Brother Stephen Baker has been during the past three decades and pushing to make sure he has no access to children.

Much of the background of Baker, a Franciscan friar, remains a mystery.

That has led to speculation that incidents of his alleged abuse of children – particularly boys – may reach into the hundreds, said Judy Jones, a St. Louis resident who works with SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests).

Especially disconcerting, she said, is the past decade since Baker, a brother with the Franciscans, left Bishop McCort 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.

Friar, who served Pittsburgh diocese from 1993-2000, accused of sex abuse in N.H.

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Tribune-Review

By Jason Cato

Published: Thursday, January 24, 2013.

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh this week notified parishes and alumni of a high school that a priest who worked there is accused of sexual abuse.

The Rev. Michael Ledoux, 55, a Franciscan friar, served as pastor of St. Pamphilus in Beechview from 1993-95; headmaster of Serra Catholic High School in McKeesport from 1995 to 2000; and worked as an adjunct professor at Duquesne University from 1997 through 2000.

The Philadelphia Inquirer reported this month that Ledoux resigned in July as a dean at Widener University in Chester because school officials learned of a 2003 allegation that he sexually abused a teenage boy in the 1980s in New Hampshire.

Ledoux could not be reached for comment.

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

‘Thwarting’ an Investigation

CALIFORNIA
Santa Barbara Independent

[Archive of Los Angeles Archdiocesan Documents – BishopAccountability.org]

Thursday, January 24, 2013

By Nick Welsh

Santa Barbara’s Auxiliary Bishop Thomas J. Curry has been accused of “thwarting” potential sex abuse investigations by responsible law enforcement agencies concerning at least three pedophile priests during the 1980s when Curry served as the archdiocese’s chief advisor to archbishop ​— ​and later cardinal ​— ​Roger Mahony on sex abuse cases.

Attorney Tony De Marco submitted just-released church personnel records demonstrating how concerned Curry and Mahony were that sexual-offender priests might come to the attention of law enforcement investigators. De Marco submitted these documents as part of a lawsuit he filed on behalf of a man who claims he’d been abused by a priest, Nicholas Aguilar Rivera. Rivera remains at large, and De Marco is demanding the opportunity to depose Curry and Mahony to demonstrate the extent to which the archdiocese was “thwarting law enforcement investigations.”

In 1986, Curry wrote a memo to Mahony about Michael Baker, a priest who’d admitted to molesting boys that year. Curry cautioned against allowing Baker to see a California therapist. “I see a problem here, in that if he were to mention his problem with child abuse it would put the therapist in a position of having to report him.” Curry then added, “I think we have to be very careful about whom he goes to see and what kind of information is released to the program. Given the fact that he cannot mention his past problem, the necessity to be so circumspect might defeat the purpose of his going to a therapist.”

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.

January 23, 2013

Renewed push to update statute-of-limitations laws in child sex abuse cases

PENNSYLVANIA
WHPT

Saying the move is long overdue and flanked by high-profile reform advocates, state Reps. Louise Williams Bishop and Michael P. McGeehan, both D-Phila., today announced a renewed push to update archaic statute-of-limitations laws in child sexual abuse cases at a Capitol Rotunda news conference.

Bishop and McGeehan said their respective bills are patterned after ones they introduced in the last two-year legislative session but died after being inexplicably bottled up in the committee process.

Bishop has reintroduced her legislation, now known as H.B. 237, which would abolish the statute of limitations on criminal charges and civil lawsuits in cases of child sexual abuse.

“Child sexual abuse victims are slowly beginning to break the barriers of silence; however, they still face a daunting procedural obstacle — the statute of limitations,” said Bishop, who came out last year as a victim of child sexual abuse. “Instead of suppressing legislation that would lift the statute of limitations, we should be voting these game-changing bills out of committee and the House, so more victims can seek 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.

Opinion Poll

PENNSYLVANIA
The Tribune-Democrat

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests says churches should notify the public about accusations of child abuse. Do you agree?

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.

The Church Is Wrong! Fr. Flannery, Like MLK, Is Right to Follow His Conscience

IRELAND
Huffington Post

Steve McSwain

I was reading recently of the bravery of the Irish Catholic priest, Fr. Tony Flannery, who, at 66, is being threatened by the Vatican.

No! I thought. The Vatican never threatens anyone!

LOL!

The history of Christianity, and not just in Catholicism but in all Christian denominations, is similar. The Church has found that it thrives best not in a world it sacrifices itself to redeem — not in a world it lays down its life in order to give life to others — but, instead, it survives best by demanding coercion, by making itself into a “god” and insisting this God can only be known “our” way; by making its beliefs into an idol that the faithful must bow the knee. The church has found that, by drawing lines in theological and doctrinal sands, battle lines between “us,” the theologically “correct” and “them,” the doctrinally “wrong,” that, by doing so, the church wins.

But does it really?

Of course, it does not, as history has repeatedly demonstrated. Unfortunately, however, history, at least as far as the church is concerned, has never been a very good teacher for church leaders.

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 admits to groping teen girl and two women

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

A Roman Catholic priest who ministered at a Long Beach church pleaded no contest to sexually groping a 14-year-old girl and two young women and was sentenced to five years felony probation Wednesday.

Father Luis Jose Cuevas, 67, who served at St. Athanasius Church on Linden Avenue, admitted to groping the 14-year-old and two 19-year-olds. He pleaded no contest to two misdemeanors of sexual assault in February 2012 and a felony lewd act upon a child in July 2010.

“God be with you because you need him now more than we do,” Deputy Dist. Atty. Jennifer Zepeda told the priest, reading from a statement from the victims.

In addition to probation, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Jesse Rodriguez ordered the priest to complete a 40-hour community service program and to register as a sex offender.

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.

R.I. judge lifts documents’ seal on widow’s $60 million gift to Legion of Christ

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

January 23, 2013 5:14 pm

By Richard C. Dujardin

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Agreeing with The Providence Journal and certain other media outlets, a state judge has ordered the unsealing of documents relating to a $60 million bequest that the late Gabrielle Mee left to the scandal-plagued Legion of Christ.

Superior Court Judge Michael Silverstein ordered the unsealing on Wednesday, granting a request brought by The Providence Journal, New York Times, National Catholic Reporter and the Associated Press.

Mee’s niece, Mary Lou Dauray of Sausalito, Calif., has been challenging the distribution of her aunt’s assets, claiming that the Legion of Christ exercised undue influence on her aunt when it convinced her to donate all her money to the order before she died in 2008 at age 96. The order owns Mater Ecclesiae College in Smithfield.

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.

RI Judge Orders Legion of Christ Papers Unsealed

PROVIDENCE (RI)
ABC News

By DAVID KLEPPER Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, R.I. January 24, 2013 (AP)

A Rhode Island judge has ordered the unsealing of documents related to a disgraced Roman Catholic organization called the Legion of Christ as it faces questions about its relationship to wealthy elderly patrons.

Superior Court Judge Michael Silverstein ruled Wednesday the public should be allowed to scrutinize the documents.

The documents are from a lawsuit filed by a woman contesting the will of a wealthy aunt who left the Legion $60 million. The Legion argued the documents could taint prospective jurors.

The Associated Press and other media organizations sought to unseal the documents, arguing they could reveal the Legion’s operations.

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

St. Paul: Priest gets his exposure case sealed

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.comtwincities.com
Posted: 01/23/2013 12:01:00 AM CST

A priest formerly assigned to a Chanhassen parish has persuaded a judge to seal the record of his conviction for indecent exposure in a St. Paul park.

Michael John Krenik, 55, has been banned from public ministry since his November 2010 arrest. He wants to become a hospital chaplain, his attorney, Paul Engh, told Ramsey County District Judge Judith Tilsen on Wednesday, Jan. 23.

“I truly regret and am sorry for my actions of Nov. 4, 2010,” Krenik said, standing before the judge in his clerical collar. He said he wanted the conviction expunged so that he could “begin anew” in his relationship with the city, the church and himself.

Engh told the court that a parish priest, Krenik offered forgiveness to others on a regular basis.

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.

Woman flees polygamy after disappearing 10 years ago

ARIZONA
The Salt Lake Tribune

By Jim Dalrymple II
The Salt Lake Tribune

First Published Jan 22 2013

A woman who was finally able to leave an FLDS-controlled polygamous community escaped thanks to beefed up law enforcement in the area, according to the Arizona Attorney General’s Office, which pleaded Tuesday for more funding.

In a news conference, Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne announced that Ruby Jessop had managed to leave Colorado City earlier this month. According to a news release, Jessop was held against her will for more than 10 years after being forced to marry her second-cousin, Haven Barlow, in 2001. Ruby, now 26, has been granted temporary custody of her six children, according to the release.

He said a criminal probe of the FLDS and the Marshal’s Office, which serves as a small police force in the twin polygamous towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, is currently under way. He declined to provide details.

“What they do is say, ‘Everybody watch her so she won’t run away.’ Then she can’t leave,” Horne said of women like Ruby. “Women who wanted to escape have been forcibly held by the marshals against their will.”

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.

Arizona mother of six escapes 12-year nightmare in Warren Jeffs’ polygamous sect

ARIZONA
Fox News

A mother of six who authorities say was held captive in an Arizona town by Warren Jeffs’ polygamous sect and the local police force it controlled has escaped with her children, according to the state’s top lawman.

Ruby Jessop, 26, whose detention in Colorado City led to a criminal probe of the church founded by the now-imprisoned Jeffs, was granted temporary custody of the children and has left the tiny town, according to Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne. As a member of Jeffs’ Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS), Jessop was forced to marry her brother-in-law at age 14. For the next dozen years, she remained trapped in the Utah-Arizona border town, Horne said, along with several other women allegedly held captive by church elders.

“What they do is say, ‘Everybody watch her so she won’t run away.’ Then she can’t leave,” Horne said. “Women who wanted to escape have been forcibly held by the marshals against their will.”

A criminal probe of the FLDS and the Marshal’s Office, the police force with jurisdiction over the twin polygamous towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, is currently ongoing, said Horne, who declined to elaborate. The Marshal’s Office has long been accused of being under the control of the sect.

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.

The incredible story …

ARIZONA
Daily Mail (United Kingdom)

The incredible story of child bride forced to marry step-brother who escaped Warren Jeffs’ polygamous sect with her six children

By Rachel Quigley

PUBLISHED: 15:18 EST, 23 January 2013

Ruby Jessop was just 14-years-old when she was deemed ‘sexually mature’ by polygamous sect leader Warren Jeffs and forced to marry her step-brother and have sex with different men.

She was held against her will at the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints for the next 12 years, in which time she bore six children and lived under the iron fist of the pervert leader.

Ruby Jessop, now 26, managed to escape from the sick and twisted world of Warren Jeffs last month and has now been granted temporary custody of the children aged from two to ten, who were being held ‘hostage’ by the sect, her sister said.

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

Why Cardinal Mahony should have resigned 10 years ago

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Catholic Culture

Phil Lawler

In 2002, when Pope John Paul II called the leaders of the US bishops’ conference to Rome for a discussion of the sex-abuse crisis, one cardinal, speaking to the Los Angeles Times under cover of anonymity, said that the prelates would push for the resignation of Boston’s Cardinal Bernard Law.

Cardinal Law was in trouble, of course, because of the revelations that he had covered up evidence of sexual abuse by priests, and shuffled abusive priests from one parish to another without informing parishioners.

The anonymous prelate who called for Law’s scalp was never identified, but most informed observers believe that it was Cardinal Roger Mahony of Los Angeles.

That was back in 2002. Now, after a decade of legal resistance, the Los Angeles archdiocese has released files that show how Cardinal Mahony had handling sex-abuse complaints: roughly the same way Cardinal Law did. Thanks to the dogged efforts of lawyers for the LA archdiocese, this evidence became public only after Cardinal Mahony’s retirement. But if it was indeed Cardinal Mahony who wanted Cardinal Law to step down in 2002, it seems quite clear that he should have followed his own advice.

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.

Los Angeles scandal over? Hardly. Fmr LA priest sentenced for sexual assault

LONG BEACH (CA)
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on January 23, 2013

Less than 48 hours after the historic first “document dump” in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, a former Long Beach priest has been sentenced to probation and must register as a sex offender.

Fr. Cuevas, Do you have a secret file in Archbishop Gomez’ office?

And people say that the “scandal” is over …

According to the Long Beach Press Telegram:

Luis Jose Cuevas, who was once a parish priest at St. Athanasius Catholic Church, 5390 Linden Ave., was given five years of probation and must register as a sex offender as part of a plea agreement.

Cuevas, who was initially charged with nine counts, agreed to one count of sexual battery against of each of three victims, including one felony because the victim was a minor.

In April of 2012, two adult women came forward to say that Cuevas had sexually assaulted them. During the police investigation, Cuevas was allowed to remain at St. Athanasius Catholic Church. When the third victim came forward—a minor who says she was molested by Cuevas during over the course of two years—Archdiocese officials removed the priest. Cuevas was arrested in July 2012.

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.

Redemptorists change their tune: Flannery must obey CDF

IRELAND
Vatican Insider

Redemptorist Superior General, Michael Brehl has asked the Irish priest to obey the instructions of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith

Gianni Valente
Rome

The case of rebel Redemptorist priest Tony Flannery has reached a significant turning point. In recent days Fr. Flannery announced his intention – to newspapers and in a public conference – to ignore the disciplinary measures presented against him by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Today, Michael Brehl, the Canadian Superior General of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, issued a declaration in which he expressed his deep regret for the actions recently undertaken by Flannery, also a member of the Congregation.

In his brief statement, the current Superior of the religious order founded by Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori, gives a brief summary of the whole affair: “In January, 2012, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith raised concerns about some of the writings of Fr. Flannery which were ambiguous regarding fundamental areas of Catholic doctrine, including the priesthood, the nature of the Church, and the Eucharist,” Brehl writes. The priest “was instructed to undertake a period of prayer and theological reflection to clarify his positions on these matters. During this sabbatical period, he was instructed not to grant interviews or make public statements, and to withdraw from active involvement in the leadership of the ACP (an independent body of Catholic priests which had been called to address the paedophilia scandal in the Irish Catholic Church, Ed.), especially since the priesthood was one of the matters on which he was asked to clarify his position. He was also instructed to withdraw from active priestly ministry during this period of prayer and reflection.”

In his statement, Fr. Brehl “earnestly” urged his confrere “to renew the efforts to find an agreed solution to the concerns raised by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the faith.” Finally, he invited his “Redemptorist confreres of the Irish Province to join with [him] in praying and working together in the spirit of St Alphonsus to maintain and strengthen our communion with the Universal 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.

Former Long Beach Priest Sentenced for Sex Crimes

LONG BEACH (CA)
NBC Southern California

[with video]

By Jonathan Lloyd and Toni Guinyard

Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013

A former Long Beach priest who entered a plea of no contest to sexual assault charges — including lewd acts involving a child — was sentenced Wednesday and ordered to register as a sex offender.

Luis Jose Cuevas, 68, who served the North Long Beach Catholic community for seven years, entered the no-contest plea in December. He was charged with eight misdemeanor counts of sex assault involving two women and one felony count of a lewd acts involving a child.

The girl, 17, accused the priest of repeatedly groping her at the church during a period of two years.

He was sentenced to five years felony probation, 40 hours of community service and one year of offender counseling. He also must register as a sex offender.

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 Long Beach priest sentenced to probation for sexual battery

LONG BEACH (CA)
Press-Telegram

By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
presstelegram.com
Posted: 01/23/2013

LONG BEACH — A former Catholic priest who pleaded no contest to three counts of sexual battery avoided jail time Wednesday at his sentencing in Long Beach Superior Court.

Luis Jose Cuevas, who was once a parish priest at St. Athanasius Catholic Church, 5390 Linden Ave., was given five years of probation and must register as a sex offender as part of a plea agreement.

Cuevas, who was initially charged with nine counts, agreed to one count of sexual battery against of each of three victims, including one felony because the victim was a minor.

Prior to the sentencing, Cuevas’ lawyer, George Bird, said his client accepted responsibility for his actions and would “use his remaining time to do kind, as he attempted

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.

Will Cardinal Roger Mahony Face Charges for Sex Abuse Cover Up? SNAP says Yes

LOS ANGELES (CA)
LA Weekly

By Patrick Range McDonald
Wed., Jan. 23 2013

On the front page of this morning’s Los Angeles Times, the paper notes that several legal experts suspect Cardinal Roger Mahony will not face criminal charges for covering up clergy sex abuse due to the statute of limitations. One advocacy group says those experts have it wrong.

“We aren’t police, prosecutors or even lawyers,” says David Clohessy, director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), in a press statement today. “But for 25 years, we’ve seen, in the words of Martin Luther King Jr., ‘the long arc of history bend toward justice.’ We’ve seen secular authorities become increasingly assertive and creative and successful in pursuing sophisticated criminals.”

Founded in 1988, SNAP is the world’s oldest and largest support group for clergy abuse victims and has more than 12,000 members.

Clohessy adds, “Remember one simple fact and one simple adage: Al Capone was nailed on tax evasion [and] ‘Where there’s a will, there’s a way.'”

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

Archdiocese victim-services coordinator testifies

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

Joseph A. Slobodzian, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
Posted: Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The victim-services coordinator for the Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia spent this morning on the witness stand caught in the cross-fire questioning of defense and prosecution lawyers in the sex-assault trial of a priest and a former parochial school teacher.

Lawyers for the Rev. Charles Engelhardt and Bernard Shero called Louise Hagner as part of their continuing attack on the credibility of victim-accuser “Billy Doe” in the Philadelphia Common Pleas Court trial.

Billy, now 24, alleges that Engelhardt, 66, and Shero, 49, raped and assaulted him in 1998-1999 when he was a 10-year-old altar boy at St. Jerome’s parish school in the Northeast.

Defense lawyers contend that the assaults never happened and have portrayed Billy as a troubled drug-addicted man trying to make money by suing the archdiocese.

Hagner, who said she fields sex-abuse allegations against priests and other church personnel and arranges for social and support services, testified about her telephone and in-person interviews with Billy on Jan. 30, 2009 after he called the archdiocesan sex-abuse hotline.

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Former pastor found guilty of second wife’s murder

PENNSYLVANIA
Citizens Voice

By Denis J. O’Malley (Staff Writer)
Published: January 23, 2013

After less than two hours of deliberation, a Monroe County jury on Tuesday convicted the former pastor accused of killing his second wife in 2008 with first-degree murder.

The relatively quick decision, which also found Arthur Schirmer, 64, guilty of tampering with or fabricating physical evidence for staging a car crash on Route 715 in Jackson Twp. to explain Betty Jean Schirmer’s death, came after an 11-day trial that saw nearly 60 witnesses testify.

Schirmer, who served as pastor at Reeders United Methodist Church at the time of the murder, showed hardly any reaction as he stood listening to the jury forewoman report the guilty verdict at about 4:20 p.m.

Just a few feet behind him on the other side of the courtroom’s wooden gallery barrier, Mr. Schirmer’s two daughters and his fiancée buried their heads in their hands and wept.

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Arthur Schirmer, Pa. pastor, convicted of second wife’s murder, now faces trial in first wife

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS News

(CBS/AP) STROUDSBURG, Pa. – A former Methodist clergyman convicted Tuesday of bludgeoning his second wife to death in 2008 will now face trial for allegedly killing his first wife.

Arthur Schirmer, 64, was found guilty of first-degree murder and evidence tampering after a jury in the Poconos concluded he clubbed Betty Schirmer on the head with a crowbar, then loaded her into their PT Cruiser and staged a low-speed accident in an effort to conceal the crime.

In September 2012, a grand jury indicted Schirmer in the 1999 death of his first wife, Jewel Schirmer. A trial date has not been set.

Schirmer has maintained his innocence in both Betty and Jewel’s deaths, and his attorney pledged to appeal the verdict. Defense attorney Brandon Reish had insisted in his closing argument that while his client cheated on Betty, he had no motive to kill her.

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

Social worker testifies about Pa. priest accuser

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NECN

Jan 23, 2013

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A church social worker says she believed a longtime heroin addict was sober when he raised abuse claims against two priests and a teacher.

Louise Hagner’s testimony for the defense Wednesday is designed to discredit the accuser. The young man has testified that he was high when he first detailed the abuse.

He has since changed key details of his story.

Hagner’s notes show he said he was abused by sixth-grade teacher Bernard Shero in the classroom in 2000 and raped by the Rev. Charles Engelhardt for five hours at church.

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Downtown Protest To Be Held Over Alleged Predator Priest

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – A protest will be held downtown Wednesday afternoon to urge the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese to break their silence about an alleged predator priest who used to work in the city.

According to a press release, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) will protest outside of the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese headquarters on the Boulevard of the Allies around 2 p.m.

The protest will be about Fr. Michael Ledoux, a Franciscan priest, who resigned from his position near Philadelphia after reports accused him of reportedly molesting a child.

For the last nine years, Ledoux had worked at Widener University, but prior to that he spent time at Duquesne University, Sierra Catholoc High School and St. Pamphilus parish in Pittsburgh.

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

New Website Documents Abuse Allegations Against Philly Priests

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

[The Philadelphia Archive – BishopAccountability.org]

By David Chang
Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013

Several months after the conviction of Msgr. William Lynn, a new website has been launched featuring files that were used as evidence during his child-endangerment trial last year.

The Philadelphia Archive from watchdog group Bishop Accountability, has posted 195 pages from the file of convicted former priest Edward Avery. The website plans to post more documents each month until they have a 5,780 page collection online.

The website states the following:

These documents, which became public when they were entered into evidence at the 2012 trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn and Rev. James J. Brennan, offer a rich sample of the archdiocesan files that formed the basis of the work of three Philadelphia grand juries. Those men and women were impaneled under District Attorneys Lynne Abraham and Seth Williams, and the reports that they produced in 2003, 2005, and 2011 are the gold standard of investigative work on the Catholic abuse crisis in the United States.

The 2005 Philadelphia Grand Jury Report in particular is remarkably comprehensive, dealing in an integrated and forceful way with aspects of the crisis that are too often examined in isolation. The abuse itself is described in harrowing and meticulous detail. But the report also studies the mismanagement of the crisis and the cover-up of the abuse, and it clearly explains the holes in current secular law that sometimes make it difficult or impossible to punish abusers and enablers.

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Former Long Beach Priest Faces Sentence for Sex Crimes

LONG BEACH (CA)
NBC Southern California

By Jonathan Lloyd and Toni Guinyard

Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013

A former Long Beach priest who entered a plea of no contest to sexual assault charges — including lewd acts involving a child — is scheduled for sentencing Wednesday.

Luis Jose Cuevas, 68, who served the North Long Beach Catholic community for seven years, entered the no-contest plea in December. He was charged with eight misdemeanor counts of sex assault involving two women and one felony count of a lewd acts involving a child.

The girl, 17, accused the priest of repeatedly groping her at the church during a period of two years.

He faces a maximum penalty of one year of sex offender counseling, five years formal probation and 40 hours of community service.

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

Priest accused of abuse in New Hampshire once served here

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

January 23, 2013

By Ann Rodgers / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Letters will be sent to members of two Catholic parishes and alumni of Serra Catholic High School asking if anyone was harmed by a Franciscan priest who served there in the 1990s and who was recently revealed to have been accused of molesting a boy in New Hampshire in the late 1980s.

The Rev. Michael Ledoux, a Franciscan Friar from the Province of the Immaculate Conception in New York, was pastor of St. Pamphilus in Beechview from 1993-95, principal of Serra from 1995-2000 and said Mass regularly at St. Angela Merici in White Oak in 1999-2000, said the Rev. Ronald Lengwin, spokesman for the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

The pastors of the two parishes will make announcements this weekend and send letters asking parishioners to contact either the diocesan or Pennsylvania state abuse hotlines if they were harmed by Father Ledoux “or anyone representing the church,” he said. An identical letter will be sent by the principal and superintendant of Serra Catholic to all alumni, he said.

Father Ledoux, who had spent the past nine years working at Widener University near Philadelphia, recently resigned after it was revealed that in 2003 the Diocese of Manchester, N.H., received a complaint that he had molested a minor in 1986 or 1987, when he was a pastor in Derry, N.H.

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Read ‘Em and Weep: Bishop Accountability Publishes Data On Claims Against Philly Priests

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change

[The Philadelphia Archive – BishopAccountability.org]

January 23, 2013 by Susan Matthews

Click here to read: “Watchdog group releases data on claims against Archdiocese of Philadelphia priests,” by John P. Martin, The Philadelphia Inquirer, January 23, 2013

Editor’s note: If you couldn’t attend Msgr. William Lynn’s trial, here’s your chance to examine the documents submitted as evidence. “Read ‘em and weep” was never a more appropriate statement. The Church hierarchy has dealt the Philly faithful a bad hand. – Susan Matthews

Excerpt from Martin’s article: “The group, BishopAccountability.org, culled the documents from evidence introduced at last year’s landmark child-endangerment trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn.

The records include confidential church memos, e-mails, psychological evaluations, and correspondence among archdiocese officials, accusers, and more than 20 priests who served in area parishes over the last half-century.

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LA Archdiocese Document Dump: The First-Ever Known Tijuana Victim of Pedo-Priest Eleuterio Ramos

By Gustavo Arellano
Wed., Jan. 23 2013

[Ramos file – BishopAccountability.org]

[Documents Selected and Highlighted on the AbusedInSoCal.com Website – Ramos 1986]

[Archive of Los Angeles Archdiocesan Documents – BishopAccountability.org]

I’ve spent nearly a decade writing about Eleuterio Ramos, the most notorious pedophile priest in the history of the Diocese of Orange, a monster who admitted to molesting “at least” 25 boys, a ghoul who church officials–including current Diocese of Boise and Diocese of Sacramento bishops Michael Driscoll and Jaime Soto, and current St. Timothy Church pastor John Urell–sent down to Tijuana in 1985 to ensure he’d escape the law after admitting to molesting a teenager at St. Anthony Claret in Anaheim.

And Tijuana is where the final mystery of Ramos exists.

The Orange diocese’s personnel files on Ramos makes no mention of any Ramos victims based down there (although Ramos liked to take OC children to Tijuana to get gang-raped), and none of the dozens of people who have filed civil lawsuits against Ramos and the diocese of Orange and Los Angeles (where Ramos previously served) ever alleged they were from Ramos’ Tijuana holiday. But the massive document dump yesterday by the LA Archdiocese has unearthed for the first time ever a Ramos victim in Tijuana.

In Ramos’ file is a 2004 memorandum from the Diocese of San Bernardino which details a meeting that church leaders had with a man who claimed Ramos had molested him at a cabin in Crestline. The victim (whose name is redacted in the document) said that he first encountered Ramos at Divina Providencia Parish and Our Lady of Loreto chapel in Tijuana, where Ramos headed–I kid you not–a children’s ministry. Starting in 1985 and continuing until the boy’s family moved to San Bernardino, Ramos molested the child repeatedly–at Crestline, at hotels near Disneyland, in Los Angeles, and in Tijuana proper. In 2003, when stories about Ramos’ depravity first hit Southern California newspapers, the victims family asked him if Ramos–who was a “good family friend”–had ever molested him; the victim denied it. The victim didn’t want to tell his family because he was, according to the notes of the meeting, “fearful of his mother’s reaction to his abuse since he recalls that his mother would frequently encourage her son to take private overnight trips with Fr. Ramos (e.g., the Crestline, Disneyland, and Universal Studios trips).”

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CA – Victims dispute hopelessness about charges vs. Mahony

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Posted by David Clohessy on January 23, 2013

It’s factually and morally wrong to assume that criminal charges can’t be brought against current and former top LA archdiocesan officials, especially with tens of thousands of church records about to be released.

We aren’t police, prosecutors or even lawyers. But for 25 years, we’ve seen – in the words of Martin Luther King – “the long arc of history bend toward justice.” We’ve seen secular authorities become increasingly assertive and creative and successful in pursuing sophisticated criminals.

Remember one simple fact and one simple adage:

Al Capone was nailed on tax evasion.

“Where there’s a will, there’s a way.”

The irresponsible assumption that Mahony, Curry and others can’t be prosecuted rests on another irresponsible assumption: that their behavior has changed. Can we be more reckless than to assume that these men – who have repeatedly done serious wrong for decades and have entirely escaped penalties – have magically, completely, and voluntarily reformed?

All the policies and panels and procedures and promises made by church officials don’t change one simple truth – Archbishop Gomez and Bishop Curry and others still have the ability, right now, to do exactly as they’ve done for decades in child sex cases.

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.

Boston Archdiocese Reports Deficit, $137M Debt

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Catholic Insider

With almost no fanfare, the Boston Archdiocese released the 2012 Annual Report on Friday. This stands in contrast to last year, when the archdiocese released the 2011 results saying they had a “balanced budget,” when that really was not true. Central Operations for the archdiocese ran at a loss of about $6.8M, and the archdiocese also faces their own “fiscal cliff” of sorts as they have $137M of debt and no obvious way of paying it right now.

For all who care about the future of the Boston Archdiocese and her ability to carry out the saving mission of Jesus Christ for generations to come, there is reason for serious concern.

The report, available here, presents a lot of data, and it is easy to be overwhelmed with the data and miss the meaning of the data, as the Boston Globe did in their article on Friday. Once you look at the big picture, the message should raise alarm bells at 66 Brooks Drive and at the Vatican that we can no longer have “business as usual.” A few finance experts looked over the report and helped shed insight for us into the data. Here are just some of the key things you should know:
o Despite a “balanced budget” announced for the 2011 fiscal year, the recently released financial statements show (page 24, and page 73–Column 2) that the Central Operations of the archdiocese had an operating loss of $6.8 million in 2012 and $6.3M in 2011 (page 24). BCI pointed out the deception last year, and at least this year, they did not say they had a balanced budget–they just said they had a goal of having one.

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

Long Beach Priest Sentenced To 5 Years Of Probation In Sexual Misconduct Case

GUADALAJARA (MEXICO)
CBS News [New York NY]

January 23, 2013

By LONG BEACH (CBS)

Read original article

A former Catholic priest was sentenced to five years of felony probation Wednesday after pleading no contest to three sexual misconduct charges.

Father Luis Jose Cuevas, 68, will avoid prison time in the deal, but must also register as a sex offender and undergo counseling as part of his sentence.

Last year, Cuevas pleaded no contest to reduced charges of one felony count of lewd acts upon a child and two misdemeanor counts of sexual battery.

The alleged sex crimes in the case occurred between July 2010 and February 2012.

“The reality is that the recent allegations and the resurfacing of the priest molestation scandal from over 20 years ago . . . is that this is a very tough time to try a case like this when the issue is one of intent,” Cuevas’s attorney George Bird said.

Two 19-year-old women and one 14-year-old girl said Cuevas touched their breasts while he hugged them at St. Athanasius Catholic Church, located at 5390 Linden Avenue, in Long Beach.
All three victims were congregation members.

“We see life very differently now and spiritually. Also, we have trust issues as well,” a statement read in court by the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office said. “We don’t see people the same anymore…. God be with you because you need him more than we do.”

The Arch Diocese of Los Angeles has removed Cuevas from the ministry.

Cuevas was arrested in July at his San Jacinto residence.

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 sorry for ‘inadequate or mistaken’ response to priest abuse

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

[with video]

A Roman Catholic bishop apologized Tuesday for “inadequate or mistaken” responses to clergy sex abuse when he served as a top advisor to Cardinal Roger M. Mahony in the late 1980s.

“Like many others, I have come to a clearer understanding over the years of the causes and treatment of sexual abuse,” Bishop Thomas J. Curry, who oversees Santa Barbara and Ventura counties for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, said in a statement.

Internal church files released this week show Curry and Mahony, who was then archbishop, discussed how to conceal child molestation by priests from law enforcement, including by keeping the priests out of California to avoid prosecution. While serving as vicar of clergy, Curry also suggested to Mahony that they prevent pedophile priests from seeing therapists who might alert authorities.

DOCUMENT: Los Angeles Archdiocese priest abuse files

In one letter about a priest who had acknowledged using a 12-year-old parishioner as what a church official called his “sex partner,” Curry said it was “surprising” that a church-paid counselor hadn’t reported Father Michael Wempe to police. He and Wempe “agreed it would be better if Mike did not return to him.”

Perhaps, Curry added, the priest could be sent to “a lawyer who is also a psychiatrist” thereby putting “the reports under the protection of privilege.”

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.

CA – Two groups want LA auxiliary bishop demoted

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

[Archive of Los Angeles Archdiocesan Documents – BishopAccountability.org]

Posted by David Clohessy on January 23, 2013

Two groups that deal with clergy sex abuse are asking the top Catholic official in Los Angeles to demote one of his highest ranking staff members.

Leaders of BishopAccountability.org and of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, are writing Archbishop José H. Gomez, urging him to discipline Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Curry, who was implicated in newly-released church records about pedophile priests.

“It’s bad enough to deceive parents, parishioners and the public. It’s even worse to deceive police and prosecutors. Bishop Curry has done both,” said Joelle Casteix, SNAP Western Regional Director. “He should be fired, censured or demoted immediately.”

In memos from 1986 and 1987, between then-Msgr. Curry and Cardinal Roger Mahony, then the leader of the Los Angeles Archdiocese, Curry offers suggestions on way to prevent and circumvent investigations by police of priests who had admitted abusing young boys. His tactics included avoiding therapists who might alert authorities and sending priests to assignments out of state.

“This is an opportunity for Archbishop Gomez to make a clean break with the failed policies of his predecessor, Cardinal Mahony,” said Terence McKiernan, President of BishopAccountability.org, a website that archives Catholic abuse documents. “The documents show that Auxiliary Bishop Curry’s management of the Wempe, Baker, and Peter Garcia cases was immoral and likely illegal. At a time when managerial malfeasance has been judged criminal in Philadelphia and Kansas City, Archbishop Gomez must do the accountable thing: remove Bishop Curry from his positions of power and make a full disclosure of the archdiocese’s previous obstructionist practices.”

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Redemptorist priest: Vatican threatened excommunication for my teachings

IRELAND
National Catholic Reporter

by John Cooney | Jan. 23, 2013

Dublin —
Irish Redemptorist Fr. Tony Flannery broke a year of silence Sunday to reveal that the Vatican had threatened him with excommunication and removal from his religious congregation because he advocates for open discussions about church teachings on ordaining women, clerical celibacy, contraceptives and homosexuality.

The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith removed Flannery, 66, from public ministry last February, pending the outcome of its inquiries into views he expressed in Reality, a Redemptorist-run magazine.

Flannery also said he has had no direct contact in person or writing from the congregation. All communication has come through the Redemptorist superior general in Rome, Fr. Michael Brehl.

Flannery described the actions against him as “frightening, disproportionate and reminiscent of the Inquisition.”

He said he initially tried to find a compromise with the Vatican congregation, but by September, it became clear this would not 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.

PA – Victims blast bishop over secrecy about predator

JOHNSTOWN (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will

–disclose that a just “outed” credibly accused child molesting cleric worked at third Catholic school,

— beg anyone who may have seen, suspected, or suffered his crimes to come forward, and

–urge his victims and victims of other Johnstown clerics- to report to police officials, not church officials.

They also want to know why Johnstown Catholic officials delayed for over a year before releasing information about the alleged predator to the public.

WHEN
Wednesday, January 23, at 11:00 a.m.

WHERE
In front of the Johnstown Police Station at 401 Washington Street (corner of Market St.), Johnstown, PA

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.

PA – Recently ‘outed’ priest worked in Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will urge Pittsburgh’s Catholic bishop to

–explain his silence about a recently “outed” predator priest who worked in Pittsburgh,

–disclose the names and whereabouts of any other credibly accused child molesting clerics who have worked in Pittsburgh (regardless of where their alleged crimes took place), and

–use all of his resources (diocesan websites, parish bulletins, and pulpit announcements) to spread info about the just-outed priest and aggressively seek out others who may have been hurt by him.

They will also urge anyone who may have seen, suspected, or suffered clergy crimes in Pittsburgh in any denomination – to come forward, call police, expose wrongdoing, protect kids and start healing.

WHEN
TODAY, Tuesday, January 22, at 2:00- p.m.

WHERE
Outside the Pittsburgh Catholic diocese headquarters (“chancery office”), 111 Boulevard of the Allies (corner of Stanwix) in Pittsburgh, PA

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.

Troy priest center of embezzlement investigation

MICHIGAN
Click on Detroit

TROY, Mich. –
The priest of a church in Troy has temporarily stepped aside in the wake of an embezzlement investigation.

The Archdiocese of Detroit said the Rev. Edward Belczak of the St. Thomas More Parish was temporarily excluded from his post on Tuesday.

Both the Archdiocese and the Troy Police Department are conducting separate investigations into a slew of alleged misappropriation and mismanagement by Belczak.

They include:
•Taking excess compensation beyond archdiocesan policies, estimating a loss of $92,000 to the parish over the past six years.
•Accepting and directing funds to himself that should have been posted to parish accounts, estimating a loss to the parish of $16,000 over the past six years.
•Compensating, with benefits, an individual best described as a “ghost employee,” estimating a loss of $240,000 to the parish over the past six years.
•Maintaining improper medical/dental insurance coverage for an individual, estimating a loss of approximately $26,000 to the parish over the past six years.
•Authorizing a long-term disability policy for one employee, while not providing a similar benefit to other parish staff members, estimating a loss of $20,000 to the parish.

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Files Revealing Sex Abuse Coverup Shocks Attorney

SAN DIEGO (CA)
NBC San Diego

By Nicole Gonzales and R. Stickney
Wednesday, Jan 23, 2013

A San Diego attorney who represents sexual abuse victims of Catholic priests said even he was shocked at the extensive cover up revealed in newly-released documents.

Thousands of pages from the internal disciplinary files of 14 priests made public Monday show retired Los Angeles Archdiocese Cardinal Roger Mahony and other top aides maneuvered behind the scenes to shield molester priests and provide damage control for the church.

San Diego attorney Irwin Zalkin has represented survivors of clergy sexual abuse for the past decades and some of his clients are included in the 30,000 pages of confidential files made public.

He told NBC 7 San Diego he’s amazed at how long this scandal was covered up.

“Clearly, clearly no interest in protecting children. None,” Zalkin said. “This was all about protecting the church from scandal.”

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.

Unholy monster Weberman gets 103 years

NEW YORK
New York Post

By JOSH SAUL
Last Updated: 3:55 AM, January 23, 2013

The Brooklyn teen sadistically abused by her Hasidic counselor from the time she was 12 smiled through her tears yesterday — as the perverted monster was sentenced to 103 years behind bars.

Pedophile Nechemya Weberman, 54, showed no emotion when he heard the judge pronounce his virtual life sentence for repeatedly molesting the girl for more than three years in his locked counseling office.

But his victim, now 18, showed how glad she was, smiling outside court minutes after tearfully recounting to the judge how the Williamsburg counselor had abused her.

“I clearly remember how I would look in the mirror and see a person I didn’t recognize. I saw a girl who didn’t want to live in her own skin,” the brave victim said, weeping, before Weberman’s sentencing in Brooklyn Supreme 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.

Admitted Sex Offender Avoids Jail Time

MISSISSIPPI
WJTV

[with video]

By: Chris Williams | WJTV
Published: January 22, 2013

Jackson- John Langworthy pleaded guilty in a Hinds County court Tuesday morning.

He admitted to five counts of gratification of lust. Court records show between 1980 and 1984, Langworhty molested boys. He befriended families and worked as a babysitter before moving in on his victims.

A judge sentenced him to 10 years in prison, but suspended all 10 years, meaning he won’t serve any jail time. Langworthy will serve 5 years probation and will have to register as a sex offender.

The story came to light in August 2011. Morrison Heights Baptist Church in Clinton hired Langworthy and his wife. Langworthy publicly confessed to molesting boys and asked for forgiveness. After that, victims started coming forward.

Langworthy also lived in Texas. He moved back to Mississippi in 1989 after similar allegations surfaced against him in Texas.

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.

Ireland: Rebel priest defies silence imposed on him by the Vatican

IRELAND
Vatican Insider

Tony Flannery, the head of Ireland’s Association of Catholic Priests, has rejected Rome’s request for him to sign a “mea culpa” declaration. “Freedom of conscience comes first,” he insists

Alessandro Speciale
Vatican City

An Irish priest has decided to defy the silence imposed on him by the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith because he considers that giving up “on freedom of thought, freedom of speech and most especially freedom of conscience is too high a price” for him “to pay to be allowed minister in today’s church.”

The 66 year old priest, Tony Flannery, a Redemptorist, is a founder of the Association of Catholic Priests in Ireland, an independent association made up of over 850 priests that was created in response to the indignation shown towards the Church’s handling of the paedophilia scandal.

In a long open letter published in The Irish Times, Flannery explained he risked excommunication and dismissal from his congregation if he did not agree to sign a document that reaffirms the Catholic Church’s doctrine on women priests and homosexuality, amongst other things.

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Vigil to support Fr Tony to be held at Papal Nunciature

IRELAND
Association of Catholic Priests

‘We are Church Ireland’ expresses its unconditional support for Fr. Tony Flannery in his assertion of his right of conscience not to be forced by an abuse of his vow of obedience to submit to the secretive demands of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

We welcome the statement of support of his Irish Redemptorist Order and the Association of Catholic priests of Ireland and Austria.

It is now up to the rest of the people of God, both non-ordained and ordained, to express their support for Tony Flannery and to that end ‘We are Church Ireland’ is organising a peaceful vigil outside the Papal Nunciature , Navan Road, Dublin 7 next Sunday 27th January 2013 at 3 p.m. and encourages all concerned for the future of the Irish Church to attend.

Further information, from Brendan Butler (Spokesperson, We are Church Ireland 086 4054984)

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Far more at stake than the future of just one priest

IRELAND
Association of Catholic Priests

“Truth can impose itself on the mind of man only in virtue of its own truth, which wins over the mind with both gentleness and power.” (Article 1, Declaration on Religious Liberty, Vatican II 1965)

Way back in 1965 this official statement reconciled me to the Catholic Church, after years of agonising as a student of history over its long record of religious persecution. That was all behind us now, I told myself. The church at its summit had at long last realised that truth cannot be conveyed or strengthened by coercion. The truth of the Creeds is centrally also love, so in future it would only be communicated lovingly, in freedom.

This conclusion was supported by the strong criticism directed by some eminent bishops during the council toward the formerly unjust practices of the church’s central theological monitor, the Holy Office (once the Roman Inquisition). This body became the ‘Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’ on the same day the Declaration on Religious Liberty was formally ratified. Most of us then expected that the CDF would now develop procedures and structures that would bear comparison with the highest principles of jurisprudence in the secular world.

The CDF has instead reverted to the intellectual brutalities of the Holy Office, reneged on this key Vatican II declaration on religious freedom, and very seriously weakened the authority of the church.

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Suspended priest pleads not guilty in meth probe

CONNECTICUT
Albany Times Union

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A suspended Roman Catholic priest in Connecticut has pleaded not guilty to federal drug charges accusing him of taking in more than $300,000 from sales of methamphetamines.

The Connecticut Post reports (http://bit.ly/VSCCTg ) that 61-year-old Kevin Wallin entered the pleas Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Hartford. Four other people have been charged in the alleged drug-selling operation that authorities say involved shipments of methamphetamine from California to Connecticut.

Wallin is the former pastor of St. Augustine Parish in Bridgeport. He resigned in 2011 citing health and personal issues and was suspended from public ministry last May by the Diocese of Bridgeport.

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The archdiocese’s cover-up

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

Editorial

The release of confidential files on 1980s clergy sex abuse in the Los Angeles Archdiocese is the beginning of the end of a long and sordid saga.

January 23, 2013

For years, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles fought to keep secret its confidential files concerning pedophile priests. Hundreds of sex abuse victims hoping for a full accounting of what church leaders knew about the growing scandal and what they did to stop it were rebuffed time and again.

But the cover-up is finally coming to an end. On Monday, a series of memos and letters filed in a civil case confirmed that Cardinal Roger M. Mahony and other church leaders plotted to shield pedophile priests rather than turn them over to police and prosecutors.

The documents, which date to 1986 and 1987, show how Mahony and Msgr. Thomas J. Curry, his top advisor on sex abuse cases, discussed strategies to keep priests from coming to the attention of law enforcement. Curry proposed to Mahony that certain priests be kept from seeing therapists, who would have been obliged to alert police; in other cases, priests were sent out of state to avoid criminal investigations. One cleric — who had admitted molesting undocumented immigrant children for decades, and even threatened one with deportation if he reported the abuse to police — was not allowed by Mahony to return to California from a treatment center, for fear that it would spark criminal or civil action.

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Church ‘centuries out of date’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Stuart Rintoul
From:The Australian
January 24, 2013

A GROUP of Catholics pressing for reform within the church has told an abuse inquiry the church is a “private and conflicted organisation” with a 17th century system of governance.

The group, Catholics for Renewal, said the church was “self-protective” on the issue of pedophile priests and must be made to report abuse allegations to police.

In its submission to the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Organisations, the group, chaired by senior Catholic Peter Johnstone, quoted the late cardinal Carlo Maria Martini saying that the church was centuries “out of date”.

It said the church’s governance was “feudal in origin”, autocratically ruled by socially isolated and increasingly aged bishops.

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Priest faces fresh charges

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

A DEFROCKED Catholic priest who was jailed in 2010 for child sex offences against 39 boys allegedly sexually assaulted another 14 boys in the 1970s and 1980s, police alleged yesterday in a facts sheet in Newcastle Local Court.

Former Maitland-Newcastle priest John Sidney Denham, 70, allegedly told one victim in 1977, ‘‘You loved it. You wanted it. You want more and more’’, after a sexual assault that left the boy, 12, ‘‘bleeding heavily’’, police alleged.

The boy did not complain to his parents about alleged repeated sexual assaults at St Pius X School, Adamstown, because he came from a violent home where alcohol was abused.

When the boy allegedly told principal Father Tom Brennan, who died late last year, he was caned.

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Child sex abuse link to celibacy

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

January 24, 2013

Barney Zwartz

MANY Catholic priests take a flexible approach to celibacy, tolerated by church leaders, and some believe sex with children or men does not count, a former Melbourne priest said on Wednesday.

”An enormous number of priests struggle with celibacy,” Philip O’Donnell told the state inquiry into how the churches handle child sex abuse.

”There’s a tolerance for imperfection in celibacy, and that may have led to a lessening of outrage at sex with children.”

He said he had no training about celibacy in the seminary and that many priests were ill-equipped. ”Chosen celibacy is a gift, but mandatory celibacy is for many priests a millstone,” he said.

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Defrocked priest to stand trial over child sex

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A defrocked Hunter Valley Catholic priest has been committed to stand trial for child sexual offences.

John Sidney Denham, 70, is accused of abusing several boys in the 1970s and 1980s at various locations, including at a Newcastle Catholic high school.

He did not show emotion as he faced Newcastle Local Court today via video link from Goulburn jail.

He has waived his right for a committal hearing and is yet to enter pleas.

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Troy priest temporarily removed in probe of church funds, Detroit archdiocese says

MICHIGAN
The Detroit News

The Archdiocese of Detroit temporarily has removed a priest from a Troy parish while authorities investigate accusations he mishandled thousands of dollars in church money over the past six years.

Archdiocese officials said the Rev. Edward Belczak has been “temporarily excluded from the office of pastor” at St. Thomas More, meaning he cannot hold that post until an administrative review process is completed.

Belczak, 67, remains a priest but is expected to leave parish housing, officials said in a statement Tuesday.

The allegations include:

Taking compensation beyond what is allowed by archdiocesan policies, causing the parish to lose an estimated $92,000 over six years.

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Lawyers for two accused of abuse paint different pictures

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

Joseph A. Slobodzian, Inquirer Staff Writer
Posted: Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Lawyers for a Philadelphia priest and an ex-parochial-school teacher on Tuesday began a two-pronged defense to convince a Common Pleas Court jury that their clients’ personalities were inconsistent with those of men who would rape a 10-year-old altar boy.

Lawyers for the Rev. Charles Engelhardt and Bernard Shero called a series of character witnesses who testified about the pair’s reputation in the community for being peaceful and law-abiding.

Engelhardt’s lawyer, Michael McGovern, also called seven current and former teachers from St. Jerome’s parish school in the Northeast to tell the jury their memories of victim-accuser “Billy Doe.”

It is not known whether either Engelhardt, 66, or Shero, 49, will testify in his own defense.

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Vatican’s demands ‘too high a price’

IRELAND
Galway Independent

A Galway priest has said the Vatican’s demand for silence is “too high a price” for a return to his priestly duties.

Redemptorist Fr Tony Flannery from Attymon in Athenry spoke out on Sunday amid threats from the Vatican that he could be excommunicated from the Catholic Church if he continued to air his controversial views.

The local priest said he had received a letter from Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith instructing him to refrain from publishing any further articles outlining his views and to have no further involvement with the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP).

Fr Flannery, who has been prevented from ministering as a priest for the last year, was also instructed to write, sign and publish a article accepting that the Catholic Church can never ordain women to the priesthood, accepting all Church stances on contraception and homosexuality, and the refusal of the sacraments to people in second relationships.

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Sentencing hearing for Catholic priest postponed

CANADA
The Western Star

Published on January 23, 2013
Cory Hurley

CORNER BROOK — One day would not have been sufficient to deal with the lengthy facts and numerous victim impact statements to be read in the sentencing hearing for Roman Catholic priest George Ansel Smith.

When that hearing was called Tuesday morning in Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador, the 74-year-old had the matter postponed until Feb. 27-28. Crown attorney Trina Simms requested the new date.

She also told the court there is a new charge to be filed before that day. It originated in New Brunswick, the province in which previous charges were laid against Smith.

Throughout the court proceedings, new charges have continued to pile up.

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Detroit Archdiocese removes priest in money probe

MICHIGAN
My Fox Detroit

TROY, Mich. (AP) — The Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit says it has temporarily removed a priest from his suburban parish while it and police investigate accusations he mishandled at least $429,000 in church money over the past six years.

The archdiocese says it forced the Rev. Edward Belczak to step aside from his duties at St. Thomas More Parish in Troy during the probes. It says the 67-year-old remains a priest but will leave parish housing.

The archdiocese says an audit found that Belczak paid a “ghost employee” $240,000. It says the priest also took $92,000 in compensation above what he’s supposed to get under church policies.

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Victim Advocacy Group Claims Diocese Took No Action

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
WKBN

[with video]

Leaders with a group advocating for victims of alleged abuse by clergy said they’re frustrated over what they claim is a lack of action to investigate local cases.

Judy Jones, a representative of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, was in town Tuesday, claiming reports of abuse against a number of former Warren JFK High School students has in turn prompted others to come forward and make their own claims against employees of the Diocese of Youngstown.

Jones claims there are two other, unrelated abuse allegations against Diocese employees. She wouldn’t be any more specific, other than to say the alleged incidents happened years ago.

She also said neither of the alleged victims has told anyone in law enforcement.

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Bishop Murry will hold press conference Thursday

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
Canton Rep

YOUNGSTOWN —
Bishop George V. Murry, head of the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown, will hold a press conference at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at his offices at 144 W. Wood St., to address media reports relative to the Diocese of Youngstown Schools.

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Victim Advocacy Group Claims Diocese Took No Action

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
WYTV

[with video]

Leaders with a group advocating for victims of alleged abuse by clergy said they’re frustrated over what they claim is a lack of action to investigate local cases.

Judy Jones, a representative of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, was in town Tuesday, claiming reports of abuse against a number of former Warren JFK High School students has in turn prompted others to come forward and make their own claims against employees of the Diocese of Youngstown.

Jones claims there are two other, unrelated abuse allegations against Diocese employees. She wouldn’t be any more specific, other than to say the alleged incidents happened years ago.

She also said neither of the alleged victims has told anyone in law enforcement.

Mahoning County Prosecutor Paul Gains said there’s only so much authorities can do.

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Court stays trial in nun’s murder case

INDIA
Conference of Religious India Bulletin

The court ordered to issue notices to investigating officers of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and to the three prime accused.

Kochi: The Kerala High court on Wednesday stayed the trial in the alleged murder of a Catholic nun, admitting a petition seeking further investigation in the 20-year old case.

The court ordered to issue notices to investigating officers of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and to the three prime accused—two Catholic priests and a nun.

The “Sister Abhaya murder” case is pending before the CBI special court in state capital Thiruvanathapuram and it had earlier dismissed a petition of rights activist Jomon Puthenpurackal seeking further investigations.

However, High Court admitted Puthenpurackal’s plea that said there were serious lapses in the investigation and justice will not be achieved if trial proceeded without further investigation.

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Woman “stolen” 48 years ago reunited with mother

SPAIN
El Pais

Jesús Duva Madrid 22 ENE

A women stolen from a hospital in Valencia almost half a century ago — just one of many alleged abductions of newborn babies during the Franco era — has been reunited with her biological mother, say police in the Mediterranean port city.

The woman, now aged 48, has asked for her identity and that of her mother to be kept private, saying that her adopted mother is seriously ill and close to death.

In the wake of several stories that appeared in the media in 2011 — revealing that during the Franco years a network of nuns and doctors at certain hospitals had taken babies from poor families or single mothers and given them to wealthy parents unable to conceive — the woman in question decided to try and trace her biological mother. The abductions are believed to have continued for several years after the death of Franco, in 1975.

The woman, who strongly suspected she was a stolen baby, lodged a judicial request to find her mother, the National Police said in a statement.

She filed a request with the relevant authorities, and the Valencia force began investigating.

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The Philadelphia Archive

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
BishopAccountability.org

We are pleased to announce the launch of our Philadelphia archdiocesan archive. The first installment comprises 195 pages from the file of convicted former priest Edward Avery. Each month we will post additional documents, until by year-end the entire 5,780-page collection will be online.

These documents, which became public when they were entered into evidence at the 2012 trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn and Rev. James J. Brennan, offer a rich sample of the archdiocesan files that formed the basis of the work of three Philadelphia grand juries. Those men and women were impaneled under District Attorneys Lynne Abraham and Seth Williams, and the reports that they produced in 2003, 2005, and 2011 are the gold standard of investigative work on the Catholic abuse crisis in the United States.

The 2005 Philadelphia Grand Jury Report in particular is remarkably comprehensive, dealing in an integrated and forceful way with aspects of the crisis that are too often examined in isolation. The abuse itself is described in harrowing and meticulous detail. But the report also studies the mismanagement of the crisis and the cover-up of the abuse, and it clearly explains the holes in current secular law that sometimes make it difficult or impossible to punish abusers and enablers. In a remarkable essay for the National Catholic Reporter, Michael Newall shows the level of engagement that this work required, and the toll that it took. Lastly, the 2005 report demonstrates that the abuse crisis cannot be understood without drawing on many sources of information – long conversations with survivors, and work with priests who are willing to help, and hundreds of hours spent in the archives, poring over assignment histories, memos, letters, and intake reports.

It is that kind of reading and immersion that we invite you to do in this archive. Reading these documents will be difficult, but you will gain from the experience a deep understanding of the culture within which the abuse was done and kept secret. You will emerge with a haunting sense of the harm for which the abusers and enablers are responsible, and the courage of the survivors and their families and loved ones.

The Avery file was posted to the internet on January 22, 2013. Improvements to the presentation of the Avery file will continue for several days, and the most recent updates and changes to the Philadelphia Archive will be noted here. If you’d like to receive announcements when we add priest files to this archive, please subscribe to our Monitor newsletter, which will be sent twice a month.

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Watchdog group releases data on claims against Archdiocese of Philadelphia priests

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

[The Philadelphia Archive – BishopAccountability.org]

John P. Martin, Inquirer Staff Writer
Posted: Wednesday, January 23, 2013

A watchdog group that runs an online clearinghouse of clergy-sex abuse allegations began publishing Tuesday the first of 5,700 pages of documents about past claims against Archdiocese of Philadelphia priests.

The group, BishopAccountability.org, culled the documents from evidence introduced at last year’s landmark child-endangerment trial of Msgr. William J. Lynn.

The records include confidential church memos, e-mails, psychological evaluations, and correspondence among archdiocese officials, accusers, and more than 20 priests who served in area parishes over the last half-century.

The allegations are not new – all were aired in two grand jury reports or at Lynn’s trial – and the accused priests they mention are dead, defrocked, or removed from ministry. But the website offers the first unfiltered public look at details of those claims, and of documents locked for years in what the archdiocese called its Secret Archives.

Many were drafted by Lynn and approved by Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua or by their predecessors. They chronicle what church officials knew and did after a priest was accused of abusing a minor.

Terence McKiernan, the president of BishopAccountability, said the records add a layer of public understanding to the grand jury investigations and prosecution of Philadelphia-area priests, which he said were unlike any others in the country.

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Nechemya Weberman Gets 103 Years for Sex Abuse, and Satmars Say ‘Whoa’

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

By Paul Berger

Published January 22, 2013.

The stunning 103-year prison term imposed on Brooklyn ‘therapist’ Nechemya Weberman for sexually abusing a girl has unleashed fierce debate, with many members of his ultra-Orthodox community saying the harsh sentence is unfair especially compared with punishment meted out to other notorious criminals.

Critics claim the long sentence will deter future abuse victims from coming forward — but victims’ advocates and prosecutors insist seeing justice done will only encourage others to report crimes to secular authorities.

Weberman, an unlicensed therapist, rabbi, and prominent member of the Satmar ultra-Orthodox community, was hit with the lengthy sentence on January 22. He was found guilty in December of 59 counts related to the abuse of the Orthodox girl over a period of three years from the age of 12.

“The community looks at a 100-year-sentence and says, ‘Whoa, murderers don’t get anywhere near 100 years,’” said Ezra Friedlander, CEO of The Friedlander Group, a public relations firm that caters to many ultra-Orthodox clients.

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Sexual abuse victim in Weberman case speaks at sentencing

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

The statement read by the sexual abuse victim in the Nechemya Weberman case:

Thank you Honorable Justice Ingram for your role during this trial (and beyond). A very special thank you to Assistant DA Kevin O’Donnell and the staff at the DA’s office for your endless hard work and sleepless nights through the trial in order to see justice served.

Standing here, I think back to those years throughout my ordeal where I suffered great psychological damage and fell into severe depression. I clearly remember how I would look in the mirror and see a person I didn’t recognize. I saw a girl who didn’t want to live in her own skin. A girl whose innocence was shattered at the age of 12. A girl who couldn’t look at her own reflection without feeling repulsed knowing what abuse that tortured person was continuously experiencing. A girl who couldn’t sleep at night because the horrifying images of the recent gruesome invasions which had been done to her body kept replaying in her head. A girl who numbed her feelings and froze her emotions every minute of every day in order to stay sane. A girl who was forced to lose any respect for herself. A girl who lost the right to say NO, to an abuser who used and abused her repeatedly for years that seemed like forever and ever. A sad girl who so badly wished she could have lived a normal young teenage life but instead was stuck being victimized by a 50-year-old man who forced her to experience and perform sickening acts for his sick sense of pleasure again and again. I saw a girl who didn’t have a reason to live.

I would cover up the burn marks inflicted on the body he used to serve his sadistic pleasures. Every time I would look at it, I would get flashbacks and feel my body burning all over again. I would cry until my tears ran dry.

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Molloy: Molestation victim takes on her accuser, Nechemya Weberman, and her community

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Joanna Molloy

The victim looked like a typical teenager in her peach sparkly top, short black skirt, tights and Ugg boots —a stylish getup that somehow still satisfied Hasidic rules of modesty. But the 18-year-old may as well have been wearing a cape as she confronted her sexual predator at his sentencing in Brooklyn Criminal Court Tuesday.

Nechemya Weberman, her trusted counselor, had sexually molested her as often as four times a week —starting when she was 12, when she should have been worried about nothing more than the homework in her teddy bear backpack.

But thanks to her slimeball counselor, the “normal young teenage life” the little girl longed for was replaced with repulsion every time she looked in the mirror.

Instead of her reflection, she told the courtroom she saw “a sad girl” who was stuck being victimized by a 50-year-old pervert —her forthright tone turning to tears when she spoke his age. She saw the sickening acts she was forced to perform for his pleasure again and again.

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Records show Los Angeles cardinal, bishop shielded abusive priests

LOS ANGELES (CA)
National Catholic Reporter

[links to the documents – Anthony DeMarco, Jeff Anderson & Associates]

by Joshua J. McElwee | Jan. 22, 2013

Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony and an auxiliary bishop shielded archdiocesan priests known to be sex abusers from law enforcement during the 1980s, even suggesting they leave the state of California to avoid prosecution, according to a series of church records released Monday.

The records, which were filed as part of a civil lawsuit against the archdiocese and were first reported Monday by the Los Angeles Times, indicate Mahony and Los Angeles Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Curry intentionally sent abusive priests to out-of-state treatment facilities as protection from arrest.

L.A. county prosecutors “will review and evaluate all [newly released] documents as they become available to us,” Sandi Gibbons, a public information officer for the L.A. County District Attorney’s office, said in a brief statement.

The release of the files, which concern 14 priests, comes as the archdiocese is preparing to release records of at least 75 more accused abusers under the terms of a separate 2007 civil settlement with more than 500 clergy abuse victims.

While the files of the 14 priests are almost three decades old — coming from long before the U.S. bishops started to address the wider issue of sex abuse by clergy in 2002 — the revelations they contain point to lingering questions about the accountability of bishops, says a former chairman of the U.S. bishops’ National Review Board for clergy sex abuse.

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Royal commission urged to report quickly

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Ehssan Veiszadeh
From: AAP
January 23, 2013

FORMER head of the Uniting Church in Australia James Haire says the royal commission into child sex abuse must move as quickly as possible.

Reverend Professor Haire, who is now the executive director of the Australian Centre for Christianity and Culture in Canberra, says the inquiry will be a good opportunity to get to the heart of criminal behaviour.

“We have to clean the thing up,” he said on Wednesday.

“It’s criminal behaviour on behalf of the perpetrators and it’s criminal behaviour on behalf of any of those who at any time tried to hide it or not let the public gaze in.”

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Attorney John Manly, Who Deposed Cardinal Mahony, Responds To LA Times Article

CALIFORNIA
MarketWatch

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif., Jan. 22, 2013 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — In response to today’s Los Angles Times story Mahony Tried to Conceal Abuse, John Manly, an attorney who has deposed former Cardinal Roger Mahony in sex abuse cases involving the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, issued the following statement:

The documents revealed in court demonstrate clearly and without question that the Archdiocese was engaged and remains engaged in an alleged conspiracy to protect pedophile priests and the Roman Catholic Hierarchy. Cardinal Roger Mahony is at the center of this conduct. The question that needs to be answered is, “Did law enforcement, and specifically its leadership in Los Angeles, either completely miss these crimes or did they ignore them?” These documents have been in the possession of the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office for years and yet no action, and little, if any criticism has been leveled against Cardinal Mahony and the Hierarchy.

It is reasonable to ask why and how such an alleged miscarriage of justice was allowed to occur. Cardinal Mahony has been deposed on three separate occasions by me and my law firm. In addition, we have deposed Bishop Curry, the Archdiocese’s chief advisor on sex abuse cases, who features prominently in the documents released last week. A review of these depositions demonstrates substantial inconsistencies with their sworn answers and the conduct illustrated in the documents.

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Church sex abuse files unlikely to lead to charges, experts say

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

By Harriet Ryan, Ashley Powers and Victoria Kim, Los Angeles Times
January 22, 2013

Over the last decade, there have been numerous calls to prosecute Cardinal Roger M. Mahony and his top aides for their mishandling of clergy sex abuse. At least three grand juries, two district attorneys and a U.S. attorney have subpoenaed documents and summoned witnesses. None of those cases resulted in charges against the archdiocese’s hierarchy.

The release this week of a trove of internal church records showing a concerted effort to hide abuse from police triggered new demands from victims and church critics that Mahony and his advisors be held criminally accountable.

The Los Angeles County district attorney pledged to review all the files and evaluate them for criminal conduct, but legal experts consulted Tuesday said the reams of new documents were unlikely to lead to charges, let alone convictions.

A nearly insurmountable barrier is the statute of limitations, the experts said. A quarter-century has passed since Mahony and his chief aide for sex abuse cases, Msgr. Thomas J. Curry, wrote memos outlining strategies to prevent police investigations of three priests who had admitted abusing boys. The 1986 and 1987 letters fall decades beyond the three-year statute of limitations for felonies such as child endangerment, obstruction of justice and conspiracy to commit those offenses.

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Mahony’s efforts to hide abuse are deplorable but unsurprising

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

By Steve Lopez
January 22, 2013

Every time we learn something new about the molestation scandal in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, it becomes more obvious why Cardinal Roger M. Mahony and his minions have fought so tenaciously to keep things under wraps.

Not to protect the privacy of victims or the rights of suspected abusers, as the church hierarchy has contended. But to hide the unconscionable deception by church leaders, who repeatedly did more to protect their own image than to help the victims of horrific crimes.

This week’s revelations of deliberate efforts by Mahony and others to shield abusers from law enforcement authorities are deplorable yet entirely unsurprising. It all fits the M.O. that’s was in place at least through the 1980s.

Conceal the church’s dirty secrets at all costs. Don’t notify the police when abuse is reported. Keep prosecutors at bay with legal challenges. Avoid reforms until public pressure mounts. And, when all else fails, have Mahony issue a carefully scripted “apology.”

His latest was perhaps his most odious and offensive, with Mahony saying he didn’t fully appreciate the hell victims had been put through until many years later.

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Gastbeitrag von Bernhard Rasche: Opfer werden nicht gehört

DEUTSCHLAND
Main Post

Der aktuelle Streit um die Aufarbeitung des sexuellen Missbrauchs in der Kirche macht mich sprachlos und wütend. Wütend machen mich vor allem die Ausführungen des Würzburger Bischofs Friedhelm Hofmann. Er spricht von transparenter Aufarbeitung, von einem beispiellosen finanziellen Entgegenkommen. Das ist lächerlich, wenn man bedenkt, dass ein Opfer einmalig 4000 Euro Entschädigung bekommt und der Täter ein Ruhestandsgehalt von monatlich 6000 Euro. Ein Missbrauchsopfer bekommt nicht formlos eine Entschädigung oder einen Zuschuss für eine Therapie. Man muss einen Fragebogen ausfüllen und seinen Therapieplan offenlegen. Das ist absolut unzumutbar. Mein Therapieplan geht niemanden etwas an. Soviel zum Thema Datenschutz, der der Kirche ja angeblich so wichtig ist. In Wahrheit geht es ihr dabei nicht um den Schutz der Opfer, sondern um den der Täter.

Abgründe tun sich auf

Zudem sorgt sich die Kirche nicht wirklich um unser Wohl. Ich spreche hier nicht von harmlosen Befindlichkeiten, sondern von Menschen, deren Leben kaputtgemacht worden ist. Von Kindern, die erst als Erwachsene merken, woher ihre Ängste, ihre Probleme, ihr Scheitern kommen. Manchmal braucht es nur einen kleinen Anlass, und sie brechen komplett zusammen. Dann tun sich plötzlich Abgründe auf.

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Ariz. Attorney General Horne says …

ARIZONA
Washington Post

Ariz. Attorney General Horne says criminal probe under way into Warren Jeffs polygamous sect

By Associated Press
Published: January 22

PHOENIX — Law enforcement in a town dominated by one of the nation’s largest polygamous sects has been preventing women from leaving, leading to a criminal probe of the church run by its jailed leader Warren Jeffs, Arizona’s attorney general said Tuesday.

Attorney General Tom Horne held a news conference in Phoenix to announce that a 26-year-old woman had been granted temporary custody of her six children and had fled the town of Colorado City, Ariz., the home base of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

He said she was forced by Jeffs to marry her brother-in-law at the age of 14, and had since been virtually held captive in the town on the Utah-Arizona border, along with many other women who want to leave.

“What they do is say, ‘Everybody watch her so she won’t run away.’ Then she can’t leave,” Horne said. “Women who wanted to escape have been forcibly held by the marshals against their will.”

He said a criminal probe of the FLDS and the Marshal’s Office, which serves as a small police force in the twin polygamous towns of Hildale, Utah, and Colorado City, is currently under way. He declined to provide details.

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House panels start review of child protection rewrite

PENNSYLVANIA
Citizens Voice

By Robert Swift (Harrisburg Bureau Chief)

Published: January 23, 2013

HARRISBURG – Lawmakers should look at a major rewrite of state child protection laws from the perspective of a child seeking help and not necessarily because of what adults are suggesting, the chairman of a special task force told a joint House committee hearing Tuesday.

The Judiciary Committee and the Children and Youth Committee started a review of proposals to overhaul a statewide child protective services system under scrutiny in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal.

“Look at this from the child’s point of view,” said David Heckler, the Bucks County district attorney and former senator who chaired the Task Force on Child Protection. “I think it will give you a perspective you might not have otherwise.”

The task force has recommended strengthening the legal definition of what constitutes child abuse, expanding the list of individuals required to report child abuse, improving the state-run ChildLine reporting hotline and toughening penalties for the crimes of endangering the welfare of a child and child pornography.

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Scandals lead lawmakers to target child abuse laws

PENNSYLVANIA
Seattle PI

By MARK SCOLFORO, Associated Press

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — State lawmakers began Tuesday to debate potential changes to how child abuse is reported, investigated and prosecuted in Pennsylvania, an effort that was launched after the Jerry Sandusky child molestation scandal exposed shortcomings in existing law.

The state House’s Judiciary and Children and Youth committees held a three-hour hearing that featured witness testimony from lawyers and doctors who served on the Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection. The task force issued a detailed set of recommendations two months ago.

Legislative leaders said some of its suggestions are likely to pass quickly, while other proposals will need more time.

“There isn’t one easy answer, or one bill that will do it,” Children and Youth Committee chairwoman Kathy Watson, R-Bucks, said afterward. Her committee will meet again on the topic in two weeks, and the Judiciary Committee has a similar schedule. Senate leaders have said the issue is also among the priorities in that chamber.

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Child protection focus of hearing

PENNSYLVANIA
PhillyBurbs

Posted on January 23, 2013

by Gary Weckselblatt

Bucks County will ultimately have a major say in how Pennsylvania changes its laws to stave off child predators such as former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky.

The Pennsylvania Task Force on Child Protection, charged with conducting a comprehensive review of the laws and procedures relating to the health and safety of children after the Sandusky child molestation scandal, is chaired by David Heckler, Bucks County’s district attorney.

On Tuesday, he and several doctors and attorneys testified about their 427-page report before the House Children and Youth and Judiciary committees. Children and Youth is chaired by state Rep. Kathy Watson, R-144, of Warrington.

“They gave us a real blueprint on where they think we should make legislative changes and where we should be going,” Watson said following the three-hour hearing, where witnesses spoke about “breaking down those walls that exist currently” between groups and agencies tasked with child protection.

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Whitby man charged with sexual assault

CANADA
Oshawa Express

An alleged relationship between a 26-year-old Whitby man and a 14-year-old girl has resulted in several sex charges against the man.

According to police, at the beginning of December 2012, the Sexual Assault and Child Abuse Unit began investigating an alleged sexual assault involving a 14-year-old (now 15-year-old) girl. The investigation revealed she and the accused had known each other for sometime through personal contact at Dominion Miracle Centre, a church in Ajax. They also communicated via social media.

Recently, the relationship had intensified to the point where they met privately. It was during these times that the alleged sexual activity took place, police say.

Although the accused is not officially involved in the church, he is heavily involved in programs at the church, police add. On January 15 police arrested the accused at his home and now want to ensure there are no other victims.

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New Sexual Abuse Files Cast Shadow on Legacy of Los Angeles Cardinal

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN

Published: January 22, 2013

Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, for more than 25 years the savvy shepherd of the Roman Catholic Church in Los Angeles, retired nearly two years ago to a renovated yellow house behind his childhood parish, pledging to stay in the spotlight by continuing to fight for the rights of immigrants.

But the cardinal now finds himself in a most unwelcome spotlight, one that he sought for years to avoid. Internal church personnel files released this week as part of a civil court case reveal that he and his top adviser knowingly shielded priests accused of child sexual abuse from law enforcement. In one letter, the cardinal ordered a clergyman to stay in New Mexico, where he had been sent for treatment, to avoid the possibility of being reported to the police in California.

Lawyers for the Los Angeles Archdiocese fought for years to prevent the release of the files, but a demand for transparency was a primary goal of the more than 500 victims of clergy abuse who signed a record settlement for $660 million with the archdiocese in July 2007. When a judge ordered the files to be made public despite the church’s objections, the archdiocese fought to be allowed to redact names and identifying details. But it recently lost that battle and now awaits an imminent cascade of 30,000 more documents that could further tarnish Cardinal Mahony’s legacy.

“He played a very prominent role as social and spiritual leader,” said William Deverell, the director of the Huntington-University of Southern California Institute on California and the West. “He’s a native, knows greater Los Angeles exceedingly well and presided over an already globally changed city, leading it into the next phase. He earned a great deal of ecumenical trust and leadership, which is now going to be re-examined.”

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Youth leader charged with sex assault

VIRGINIA
WAVY

[with video]

Mila Mimica

SUFFOLK, Va. (WAVY) – A youth leader from Suffolk’s Gates of Heaven Church was charged with sexual assault as a juvenile and police are keeping his identity under wraps.

The man is now 18 and is facing allegations of sodomy and aggravated sexual assault. He was arrested Dec. 14. Police say the abuse occurred while he was a juvenile.

WAVY.com visited the man’s neighborhood, where residents openly spoke of his personality but wanted to keep their identities hidden.

“It really is shocking,” the neighbor said. “I would never suspect [that]. I’ve never seen that in his character. That’s why it was shocking to me.”

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Group seeking investigation of Youngstown Diocese

OHIO
Youngstown Vindicator

By John W. Goodwin Jr.
jgoodwin@vindy.com

YOUNGSTOWN

An advocacy group says allegations against Franciscan Brother Stephen P. Baker have prompted others to come forward with abuse claims against someone still working for the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests is calling for any other victims to come forward and file police reports. SNAP also has asked Mahoning County Prosecutor Paul Gains for a grand-jury investigation of the diocese, but Gains explained at a Tuesday meeting and news conference that victims must first go to civil authorities in the jurisdiction where any purported abuse took place before his office can get involved with a probe.

Judy Jones, a representative of the advocacy group for victims of sexual abuse, said two people have come to the organization claiming abuse by someone still working for the six-county diocese based in Youngstown.

She said the purported abuse took place years ago, but the recent stories about Baker motivated them to come forward.

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Gains: Victim’s complaint needed

OHIO
Tribune Chronicle

January 23, 2013

By VIRGINIA SHANK – Staff reporter (vshank@tribtoday.com) , Tribune Chronicle | TribToday.com

YOUNGSTOWN – Mahoning County Prosecutor Paul J. Gains said that an investigation into alleged sex crimes involving anyone connected with the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown cannot be launched unless victims file a formal complaint.

Gains said that when he learned that Judy Jones, Midwest Associate Director for SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), intended to hand-deliver a letter to him on Tuesday, he asked her to meet with him.

“I advised her that the prosecutor’s office, any prosecutor’s office, can only seek indictment against someone after a complaint has been filed with the appropriate civil authority, and the police or appropriate authority collects the evidence and presents it to the prosecutor,” Gains said Tuesday afternoon.

Jones, who traveled to Youngstown from St. Louis, said her goal was to urge Gains to investigate the local Catholic diocese in light of recent allegations by former Warren John F. Kennedy High School students.

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How Long Does It Take a Man of God to Admit Child Rape is Wrong?

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Religion Dispatches

Post by Joanna Brooks

Today, Los Angeles Times published a front-page story reporting that Archbishop Roger Mahony of Los Angeles sat on reports of felony-level sexual abuse of children by priests for almost 15 years before he took action, and that the Los Angeles Catholic diocese waited at least 14 years before reporting abuse to law enforcement.

The LA Times report was based on letters written by Mahony in 1986 and 1987 recently entered as evidence in a civil suit. More documents will be disclosed in the coming weeks.

Here at RD, I have argued that it was the feminist movement’s emphasis on bearing witness to sexual abuse that raised consciousness and created critical mass among Catholic laity towards breaking the abuse scandal open.

And it sure doesn’t take a degree in gender studies to see how a hierarchical patriarchal institution will protect its own before it protects children.

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Five Teachers Say “Billy Doe” Was A Happy Kid At St. Jerome’s, And Not Some Dark, Depressed Loner

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

By Ralph Cipriano
for bigtrial.net

“Billy Doe” never underwent any drastic personality change while attending St. Jerome Catholic School.

That was the testimony today of five of Billy’s former teachers from St. Jerome’s who paraded through the witness stand as the defense began presenting its case at the Archdiocese of Philadelphia sex abuse trial.

Billy Doe is the pseudonym in the 2011 Philadelphia grand jury report for a ten-year-old altar boy who was allegedly raped in fifth grade by two priests who lived in the St. Jerome rectory — Father Edward V. Avery and Father Charles Engelhardt. The following year, Billy was allegedly raped by his sixth grade teacher at St. Jerome’s, Bernard Shero, after the teacher supposedly offered Billy a ride home.

The prosecution has alleged that after being raped by three predators, Billy changed from a happy-go-lucky extrovert into a dark, depressed loner. But that’s not what the faculty at St. Jerome’s saw.

“He was a happy child,” said Joann Hayes, a teacher at St. Jerome’s who taught Billy art and music from second grade through eighth grade. “I never had any problems with him,” Hayes said. She remembered Billy as part of the cast in a 1999 school musical, “Christmas Show Around The World.”

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Former priest charged over 35 sex abuse offences against altar boys

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JARED OWENS
From:The Australian
January 23, 2013

A FORMER Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing three young girls in northern NSW was this morning charged with 35 new offences relating to six altar boys, all aged between 11 and 12, in the early 1980s.

The former priest, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared in Armidale Local Court to be charged with the new offences, which allegedly occurred in Moree between 1981 and 1984. He was also charged with one count of not having approved storage for a firearm.

The 59-year-old was already facing 25 child sex offences against three girls aged as young as five, which allegedly took place over 13 years, dating back to 1975.

The former priest moved between a number of parishes in northern NSW during the 1980s and ultimately to the Sydney diocese of Parramatta, before being removed from public ministry. The decision to remove him followed a 1992 meeting with three current senior clerics, at which it was alleged he had sexually abused children.

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Revelation about Mahony coverup further angers survivors of priest sex abuse

LOS ANGELES (CA)
KPCC

[links to the documents – Anthony DeMarco, Jeff Anderson & Associates]

Ruxandra Guidi | January 22nd, 2013

While former L.A. Catholic Cardinal Roger Mahony tries to address the latest revelations implicating him in coverups of priest sex abuse, angry survivors of abuse say the church still has not suffered enough for its past actions.

Sixty-five-year-old Tony Carone was abused 56 years ago when he was an altar boy. He sighs deeply as he tries to describe coming forward about a taboo he’d kept silent about for years.

“If you talk about it, a lot of people don’t like you, especially Catholics. He says his wife was “disgusted that I would bring it up.”

Things got so bad that Carone separated from his wife two years ago and moved into his parents’ house.

In 2008, Carone received part of the 660 million-dollar settlement from the LA Archdiocese—the largest payout in a sex abuse scandal. Sitting next to him, 70 year-old Udo Strutynski, another abuse survivor, nods when Carone talks about how difficult it was to receive that cash. Strutynski calls the settlement, “blood money”. He says he eventually left the church, and joined the Southern California chapter of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

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Area bishop apologizes for role in dealing with priests accused of molesting

CALIFORNIA
Ventura County Star

[links to the documents – Anthony DeMarco, Jeff Anderson & Associates]

By Tom Kisken

Catholic Bishop Thomas J. Curry offered a public apology Tuesday, a day after the release of church personnel records showing he played a role in protecting priests accused of molestation.

The records of 14 priests — expected to be followed eventually by a huge wave of records on more accused priests — include correspondence showing Curry, retired Archdiocese of Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony and others worked to shield priests and the church.

Curry, then vicar of clergy, is now auxiliary bishop of a region in the archdiocese that includes Santa Barbara and Ventura counties.

“I wish to acknowledge and apologize for those instances when I made decisions regarding the treatment and disposition of clergy accused of sexual abuse that in retrospect appear inadequate or mistaken,” Curry said in a prepared statement.

“Like many others, I have come to a clearer understanding over the years of the causes and treatment of sexual abuse and I have fully implemented in my pastoral region the archdiocese’s policies and procedures for reporting abuse, screening those who supervise children and abuse prevention training for adults and children.”

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