ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

November 19, 2013

Church leader accused of sexually abusing children

TEXAS
My Fox DFW

By: Brandon Todd
Adapted for Web by: Sarah Crandall

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

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

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

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

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

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

Royal Commission hears of cruel, barbaric hell

AUSTRALIA
CQ News

Jessica Grewal 19th Nov 2013

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

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

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

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

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.

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

AUSTRALIA
International Business Times

By Athena Yenko | November 19, 2013

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

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

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

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

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

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

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From: The Australian
November 19, 2013

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

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

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

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

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

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.

Child abuse victim ‘manipulated’ by Anglican Church

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

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

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

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

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

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

Abuse lawyer slams ‘mean’ Anglican church

AUSTRALIA
9 News

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

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

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

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

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

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.

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

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

[the lawsuit]

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

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

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

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

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

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.

November 18, 2013

Meetings planned to discuss future direction of church

CANADA
Cape Breton Post

Published on November 18, 2013

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

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

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

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

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 reaches out to victims of sex abuse

CANADA
The Chronicle-Herald

November 18, 2013

BY FRANCIS CAMPBELL TRURO BUREAU

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

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

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

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

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

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

RHODE ISLAND
NBC 10

[Response from the Providence diocese]

Updated: Nov 18, 2013
By Katie Davis

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

All of them were credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

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

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

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

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

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

The documents were heavily redacted by state police. …

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

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

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

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

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.

Response of the Diocese of Providence to NBC 10 Story

RHODE ISLAND
Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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 Third Case Study (Or: Sugar-Coated Salt)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

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

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

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

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

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

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.

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

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

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

St. Paul News Conference Tuesday

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Lawsuit expected against St. John’s Abbey, priest

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
David Unze

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

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

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

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

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.

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

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Cynthia Boyd

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

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

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

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

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

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.

Das katholische Weltbild

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

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

Von RAINER HANK und GEORG MECK

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

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

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.

Delaware federal jury deliberates unusual clergy sex abuse case

DELAWARE
The News Journal

Written by
Sean O’Sullivan
The News Journal

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

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

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

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

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.

Delaware jury weighs clergy sex abuse claims

DELAWARE
WDEL

By Randall Chase, Associated Press

Updated Monday, November 18, 2013

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

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

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

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.

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

CANADA
The Province

BY BOB WEBER, THE CANADIAN PRESS NOVEMBER 18, 2013

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

CAUTION: GRAPHIC CONTENT FOLLOWS AND MAY DISTURB SOME READERS.

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

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

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

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

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.

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

MINNESOTA
Minnesota SNAP

For Immediate Release: Monday, November 18, 2013

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

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

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

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

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

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.

Nicht gut, aber gerecht

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

Von DANIEL DECKERS

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

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

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.

Bischof Tebartz-van Elst muss 20.000 Euro zahlen

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

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

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

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

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

Vatican tasks Ernst & Young with auditing its financial activities

VATICAN CITY
Rome Reports

[with video]

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

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

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

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INTERNATIONAL TEAM OF ASSESSORS ON ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIVITIES

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

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

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

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

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

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

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

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

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

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

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

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

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US accountants Ernst&Young to audit Vatican finances

VATICAN CITY
The Economic Times

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

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

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

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Vatican puts third department under outside financial scrutiny

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

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

By Philip Pullella

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

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

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

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

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Eric Dejaeger, former priest, pleads guilty to sex charges

CANADA
CBC News

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

CANADA
Toronto Star

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

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

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

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

He was sent back by Belgium in 2011 after it was discovered he was living there illegally.
More Video

An agreed statement of facts has yet to be entered on the charges to which Dejaeger pleaded guilty.
The trial in Iqaluit is now continuing with testimony from complainants.

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Children were ‘forced to eat their own vomit…

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

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

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

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

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

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Sex Abuse Scandal Worsens for Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and The Diocese of New Ulm

MINNESOTA
Noaker Law Firm

[the lawsuit]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Lawsuit identifies Father William J. Marks

MINNETONKA – www.clergyabuseinminnesota.com-Minnetonka Attorney Patrick Noaker filed his third lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and his second lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of New Ulm this morning identifying a second alleged pedophile priest, William J. Marks within the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis as well as the Diocese of New Ulm. Noaker filed suits against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis early this year for alleged abuse by another priest in the Archdioceses, Fr. Thomas Stitts and against The Diocese of New Ulm for alleged abuse by a priest in the Diocese, Father Francis Markey.

In this Second Judicial District Court lawsuit John Doe 107 lleges the Archdiocese and Diocese “allowed Fr. Marks to have unsupervised and unlimited access to children, including teenagers, at St. Dionysus in Tyler, Minnesota, St. John’s Catholic Church in Hector, Minnesota, and St. Clotilde in Green Valley, Minnesota, all located for a period of time within the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis prior to the formation of The Diocese of New Ulm and under the responsibility of the Archbishop and Bishop.” He goes on to allege Marks was a priest that both the Archdiocese and The Diocese “knew or should have known posed a risk of pedophilic harm to children.”

“We don’t know how many other children Marks molested at these parishes,” Noaker said. “Pedophile priests do not stop at one. Trusting children in rural locations are particularly vulnerable to unsupervised priests like Marks. We are asking for those with any information to contacts us.”

Noaker, who has spent more than a decade uncovering the Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal in Minnesota and across the United States, has amassed an extensive library of information on Marks and other abusers. Noaker recently teamed-up with attorneys Leander James and Craig Vernon of James, Vernon & Weeks, P.A. who have been involved in similar cases uncovering scandals in Oregon, Montana, Washington State and Hawaii. Like those states, Minnesota recently passed a new law, called the Child Victims Act (“CVA”) that gives new rights to adults abused as children. The CVA revives sexual abuse claims previously barred by the statute of limitations. Abuse survivors now have a window of time to file their claims, until May, 2016.

“Thanks to our Legislature and Governor Dayton, my team and I now have the legal tools to represent survivors and demand full disclosure from institutions who harbored pedophiles and covered-up incidences of child molestation,” said Noaker.

“Through similar laws, we have uncovered pedophile clergy operating in other states. We’ve helped protect kids and held the offending institutions accountable,” said Vernon.

“Through subpoenas and document demands we can now force disclosure of the identity of pedophile priests and expose cover-up,” added James, who was a principal negotiator of a $166.1 million settlement with the Northwest Jesuits, a Roman Catholic order. That settlement included an unprecedented list of non-monetary terms including public disclosure of priests identified as perpetrators.

Noaker emphasized that “survivors like our client who find the courage to come forward empower us to bring them and society long-overdue justice.”

For information about the Child Victims Act, these lawsuits and related information please go to www.clergyabuseinminnesota.com.

FOR MEDIA ONLY: For digital images, a copy of the complaint, or an interview with Patrick Noaker, Leander James or Craig Vernon, please contact Patrick Noaker (612) 839-1080, patrick@noakerlaw.com or Craig Vernon (888) 667-0683/cvernon@jvwlaw.net. Copies of the Filed Complaint can be found at http://noakerlaw.com/crime-victim-support/

Patrick Noaker
Noaker Law Firm LLC
601 Carlson Parkway, Suite 1050
Minnetonka, MN 55305
(612) 839-1080
patrick@noakerlaw.com

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5 reasons you should stay off the Pope Francis bandwagon

GlobalPost

Timothy McGrath
November 18, 2013

This week GlobalPost showed why so many people are digging on Pope Francis. He loves the sick and the poor. He lives a simple life that reflects his values. He has criticized the Catholic church for its alienating obsession with social issues. And he has called out global capitalism for the greed it has produced and the social devastation it has wrought.

Sounds good? Not so fast.

Here are some reasons we should think twice before hopping on the Pope Francis bandwagon. …

2) Poor handling of the Church’s child sex abuse crisis

Francis has made some headway on the child sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church. He’s spoken out on the problem and instituted some new laws governing Vatican officials and employees.

That’s a start, but there is much more to be done when it comes to putting words into actions.

This is especially true in Latin America, where some have questioned Francis’ handling of molestation cases in Argentina, Chile, the Dominican Republic and Peru.

He has been largely silent on four shocking cases.

1. Dominican Republic: When the Vatican discovered that its envoy in the Dominican Republic was paying underage boys for sex, it responded by secretly firing him.

2. Peru: More secret and non-transparent handling of child sex abuse has taken place in Peru, where an auxiliary bishop went on the lam after child sex allegations against him surfaced. The Vatican’s only action was, again, to secretly dismiss him from his post. The Archbishop of Lima, Juan Luis Cipriani, even criticized journalists covering the story and said that the abuser deserved “mercy.”

3. Chile: When a congressional committee began investigating sexual abuse at Catholic children’s homes, the Archbishop of Santiago refused to appear before the committee. He bravely claimed separation of church and state, despite the fact that Chile’s agency for child welfare partly subsidizes the homes. Quite a show of strength from the Vatican’s top dog in Chile.

4. Argentina: In Francis’ home country, an imprisoned priest, Father Julio Cesar Grassi, is now appealing his 15-year sentence for sexually abusing boys. You’d think a convicted and imprisoned child rapist in the Pope’s home country would offer a low-risk opportunity for the Vatican to take a strong stand against child sex abuse in the church. Not so. One bishop in Argentina has openly claimed that Grassi is innocent, and the archdiocese released a statement pointing out that of 17 charges leveled against Grassi, he had been found not guilty of 15. Great.

So when we applaud Pope Francis for his vocal opposition to poverty, inequality, and global capitalism, we should remember the pernicious things he’s not opposing as vocally.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Raymond P. Melville

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Ordained a priest of the Portland, ME diocese in 1985, Melville has been accused of the sexual abuse of at least three boys. One accuser told Portland bishop Gerry in a 1990 letter that Melville sexually abused him from 1980-1985, beginning when he was 14 years-old and Melville was a seminarian, in Maryland. Melville was sent briefly to treatment, then returned to active ministry. He was accused in a 2001 lawsuit of sexually abusing an Augusta ME boy from 1985-1992, beginning when the boy was 13 years-old. In a 2007 lawsuit an Augusta man accused Melville of sexually abusing him over a three year period, beginning when he was 12 years-old in 1986. Melville left the priesthood in 1997 and is last known to be living in Oklahoma.

Ordained: 1985

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Grafton Diocese admits to receiving more abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

TONY EASTLEY: Two months ago, the Anglican Diocese of Grafton in northern New South Wales publicly apologised to victims who suffered abuse over decades at the children’s home in Lismore.

The apology came several months after the Anglican Bishop of Grafton, Keith Slater, resigned, admitting he failed to properly manage the allegations and had turned victims away.

The diocese says it’s currently handling more cases from the orphanage and they’ve referred some matters to police.

David Hanger is chair of the Professional Standards Committee for the Diocese of Grafton.

He’s speaking here to AM’s Emily Bourke.

DAVID HANGER: What we discovered in terms of our failures was a real wake up call for us as a diocese. The outcome of that has been a deep sense of shame, a deep sense of repentance, a deep sense of wanting to ensure that we respond appropriately to what’s happened in the past and in the future. And that’s an attitudinal change for us.

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Twin Cities crisis gets worse & weirder

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON NOVEMBER 18, 2013

The St. Paul/Minneapolis archdiocesan abuse and cover up crisis is getting worse…and weirder.

Let’s start with the “weirder” part. An admitted predator priest there “met with Fr. Kevin McDonough, the vicar general, to talk about two topics — his relationship with a serial killer and his sexual interest in a convicted child rapist.”

[Minnesota Public Radio]

It’s not enough that Fr. Clarence Vavra molested kids. He also apparently was (or is) close to two men. One is a serial murderer and the other was imprisoned for raping his son.

“Weirder still: Fr. Vavra was (or is) sexually attracted to a convicted murderer and child rapist.”

A long-secret church memo says that “Fr. Vavra views Jim [the convicted child rapist] as his best friend.” When asked if he “intended to remain celibate once Jim was released from prison,” Fr. Vavra replied that “he was simply not sure that he could promise that.”

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Anglican Church denied sexual abuse at NSW North Coast children’s home

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 19, 2013

Paul Bibby
Court Reporter

The Anglican Church repeatedly denied responsibility for the physical and sexual abuse inflicted on scores of children at its home on the NSW north coast, the royal commission has heard, with one senior church figure allegedly declaring ”at least they had got a roof over their heads”.

The commission is examining the church’s response to allegations generations of vulnerable children at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore were abused from as early as 1944 to 1985.

The first day of the hearing on Monday heard harrowing evidence from victims of the abuse who recalled being assaulted on a regular basis by members of the clergy, other employees and residents. This included being anally raped, forced to perform oral sex, and beaten with canes and ”pony” whips.

The commission heard that in 2007 one of the victims, Richard ”Tommy” Campion, helped launch a group claim against the church on behalf of 41 victims.

”I decided, after having dreams about children being beaten at the end of their beds, that I had to do something,” Mr Campion said. Mr Campion said the church vehemently denied responsibility for what had happened at the home, telling him ”we didn’t own the home, we didn’t run the home, the church had nothing to do with it”.

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New Mexico diocese begins bankruptcy process

NEW MEXICO
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Staff | Nov. 18, 2013

The diocese of Gallup, N.M., has formally started the process of bankruptcy, citing the costs incurred by a growing number of sex-abuse claims.

On Nov. 12, the diocese filed for Chapter 11 reorganization in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Albuquerque, N.M., Bishop James Wall said in a letter to parishioners that was posted on the diocesan website Nov. 11.

“In early September I told you that I had made the decision that the only way to equitably and mercifully deal with the mounting sex abuse claims, still meet our commitment to you and continue the outreach mission of the Church was to file a Chapter 11 reorganization in the United States Bankruptcy Court. Since that time, we have been preparing for the filing,” Wall said in the letter. “I wanted to tell you that the Chapter 11 filing will occur on Tuesday, November 12.”

Wall was referring to a letter he’d written over the Labor Day weekend spelling out the need for financial reorganization for the diocese, especially in light of sex-abuse claims related to cases the diocese says took place “40 or 50 years ago.”

“While some of the claims relate to times when the diocese had some insurance, many relate to times when the diocese does not appear to have had insurance or the insurance is limited and not likely to cover the damages for which the diocese might be found liable,” Wall wrote in September. “Given the financial circumstances of the diocese, I have come to the conclusion that the only fair, equitable and merciful way to balance these obligations is by filing a Chapter 11 reorganization.”

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Pay continues for employees during bankruptcy case

NEW MEXICO
Houston Chronicle

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A federal judge has ruled that employees of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup can continue to be paid and receive benefits during bankruptcy protection proceedings.

The Albuquerque Journal (http://bit.ly/1aMQqCl ) reports that a Bankruptcy Court judge issued the order Friday during a hearing on the diocese’s filing last week for Chapter 11 reorganization.

The diocese had announced in September that it planned to file in bankruptcy court because of mounting claims of clergy sex abuse.

The diocese includes parishes in six counties in New Mexico, three counties in Arizona and seven American Indian reservations.

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Priest who said Catholic Church suffered a ‘culture of homosexual bullying’ is suspended

SCOTLAND
Pink News

A priest, the author of a book which alleged that the Catholic Church suffered from a “culture of homosexual bullying”, has been suspended.

Bishop Joseph Toal on Saturday removed Father Matthew Despard from his post at St John Oglivie Church in Blantyre, which is part of the Archdiocese of Motherwell.

The church has brought a case against Father Despard for breaking canon law by writing the book ‘Priesthood in Crisis’.

He wrote the book ‘Priesthood in Crisis’ in 2010, but he self-published it on Amazon’s Kindle store in March in the wake of the resignation of Cardinal Keith O’Brien.

The book claimed that a powerful ‘gay mafia’ covered up a culture of sexual bullying.

Parishioners on Sunday walked out of a service, voicing opposition to the removal of the priest, which was confirmed by a spokesman for Bishop Toal.

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Thoughts On The USCCB–Not Happy Ones

UNITED STATES
Enlightened Catholicism

Fr Thomas Reese has written an article for NCR with his observations from the just concluded USCCB meeting in Baltimore. In the main I found this was a useless and boring meeting of corporate leaders who seem frighteningly out of touch with both their consumers and their own CEO. Although Fr Reese isn’t quite that blunt in his assessment he does say some things that are never the less quite blunt. The following is an extract that includes some of Reese’s blunt observations:

……But the bishops as a conference have been embarrassingly silent on economic justice during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. Last year, the conference failed to pass a document on the economy despite growing inequality and high unemployment.

Many bishops fear that speaking loudly about economic issues would help Democrats and undermine their alliance with the Republican Party on issues like gay marriage, abortion, and religious liberty. Some even think that the conference’s earlier letters, “Economic Justice for All” and “The Challenge of Peace,” were mistakes because they hurt their friends. (Poverty, illness, justice for all, what are these boring things when compared to the titillation of sexual issues?)

Will the new leadership of the conference make a difference? (No. Especially since the Koch Bros just donated a cool million to the bishops very own university–Catholic University of America. How quickly came the reward for staying the pelvic course with their friends in the GOP.)

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Dolan on poor church for the poor

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Nov. 11, 2013 NCR Today
Fall bishops’ meeting 2013

Cardinal Timothy Dolan endorsed Pope Francis’ “Poor church for the poor,” but said that the U.S. bishops don’t have to do anything new.

The cardinal, who is president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops until the end of their meeting this week in Baltimore, was responding to questions about why the bishops were not doing more about the poor. He said that as president most of the complaint letters he received were from people complaining that the bishops talked too much about social justice, government cut backs, and the poor.

The cardinal noted that “different popes put a spotlight on different issues in the church, and certainly Pope Francis, thanks be to God, has put a spotlight on injustice and needs of the poor, and a ringing call for the church to be poor and for the poor.”

What Cardinal Dolan disagreed with is “the interpretation that the (bishops’) conference has been less than concerned about the poor.” The cardinal argued that this has been a constant concern of the conference since its founding in 1917. But there is no doubt, he said, that the pope is “asking us to be even more vigorous in an area that we already have a pretty good track record on.”

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Pension plea for child abuse survivors

AUSTRALIA
ABC Gippsland

By Celine Foenander

A man who survived years of abuse at a boys home near Sale in the early 1970s has called for compensation in the form of a pension.

Ray Shingles from Longford last week appeared before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

He told the Commission a pension scheme for survivors of abuse would ensure they continue to get the support they need.

“Our communities have a lot of alcohol and drug problems and I think by giving large amounts of money to somebody that’s got an alcohol or drug problem, you’re not really helping a situation,” Mr Shingles says.

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Royal Commission Looks Into North Coast Children’s Home’s History Of Child Abuse

AUSTRALIA
International Business Times

By Hannah Puyat | November 18, 2013

Decades after the abuse, hearings for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will be opened in Sydney, Nov. 18. With startling allegations of maltreatment and cruelty between 1940 and 1980, it is estimated that close to 200 children were sexually or physically abused at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore.

One of the children was Tommy Campion, 65, who started the whole class action lawsuit against the institution. Campion has told and retold heartbreaking stories of children who were brutally assaulted and shamed in a daily basis. He recalled that when a child would soil the bed, he would be made to wrap the dirty sheet on his head and be paraded up and down the floor to be ridiculed.

It was in 2006 that Campion thought to speak up as he was having disturbing nightmares about his experiences in the children’s home. Upon writing a letter to the church, he was given counseling and thousands of dollars in compensation.

He accepted the counseling but felt that the money involved was hush money and refused to receive any. In the same year, 40 people joined him in the class action lawsuit, 38 of them were paid in out-of-court settlements the next year.

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Anglican Church in spotlight at Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE McCARTHY Nov. 18, 2013

IT was the Catholic Church in the witness box earlier this year at the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry into child sexual abuse.

For the next two weeks at the federal royal commission in Sydney it is the Anglican Church’s turn.

The Diocese of Grafton has already apologised to children raised at its North Coast Children’s Home at Lismore, who were physically beaten, sexually abused and emotionally neglected.

But on the first day of evidence yesterday the callous treatment of the adult survivors of that abuse when they sought the diocese’s help from 2006 was laid bare.

Documents showed the diocese denied responsibility for the home, ignored the truth, bullied victims and offered shockingly low financial settlements to some, while refusing others.

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Priests ‘raped and beat’ children, Royal Commission told

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From: The Australian
November 19, 2013

A “PEDOPHILE ring” among priests at a children’s home in northern NSW performed “cleansing” rituals that involved licking naked boys, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was told yesterday.

The Anglican Church spent years attempting to deny responsibility for the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore in which dozens of children were raped, beaten and sexually abused by priests, before finally apologising this year for what took place. The royal commission heard shocking evidence yesterday about the treatment of former residents, some of whom were aged two or three when they entered the home.

One of these men, who cannot be named, broke down describing “a pedophile ring” operating among priests at the home, which was established under licence by the church and whose managers included senior church officials.

“I remember going to the rectory and I would be made to lie naked on the floor and the minister would put this stuff on my chest like a cross and then he would lick it off, right down to my genitals,” the man told the commission.

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VLAAMSE ESKIMOPATER VOOR DE RECHTER

CANADA
VTM Nieuws

In Iqaluit, de hoofdstad van het uitgestrekte territorium Nunavut in het noorden van Canada, start vandaag het proces tegen pater Eric Dejaeger, die in België geboren werd. Hij moet zich verantwoorden voor tientallen klachten over kindermisbruik in de jaren zeventig en tachtig. Het proces, een van de grootste in de geschiedenis van Nunavut, kan tot tien weken duren.

Eric Jose Dejaeger (65) is afkomstig uit Roeselare en trok in de jaren zeventig naar Canada om er eskimo’s tot het christendom te bekeren. Tussen 1978 en 1982 woonde hij in Iglooik, een kleine eskimogemeenschap. Daarna woonde hij zeven jaar in een ander dorpje, Baker Lake. Daar zou hij zich aan jongens en meisjes hebben vergrepen. In 1990 wordt de pater veroordeeld voor negen aanklachten van seksueel misbruik.

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As Dejaeger trial starts in Nunavut, Belgian media keep a close watch

CANADA
Unatsiaq Online

DAVID MURPHY

The trial of a Belgian-born Oblate priest accused of molesting children in Igloolik and Baker Lake in the 1970s and 1980s is set to begin in Iqaluit Nov. 18.

And when it starts, international media, especially Belgian news agencies that are watching the case with keen interest, will shine a spotlight on Nunavut.

Belgian journalist Cedric Lagast from the Flemish-language Het Nieuwsblad flew from Brussels to Iqaluit to cover the story.

“Obviously there’s quite a big interest in Belgium. It has got much attention in newspapers since 2010 when we first heard of it,” Lagast told Nunatsiaq News..

“A Belgian man that abused 41 people — that is immense. It would be immense in any country. So the accusations are so big, the amount of victims that he supposed to have [abused] is so big, that would make it a big story in every country,” Lagast said.

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ROYAL COMMISSION ARRIVES IN CAIRNS

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is visiting Cairns for the first time this week to hear from people who experienced institutional child sexual abuse.

Commissioners will be holding a number of private sessions in both Brisbane and Cairns from today, Monday 18 November 2013.

Royal Commission CEO, Janette Dines, said the Royal Commission has been visiting both capital cities and regional centres due to the strong demand across Australia.

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Full story: How the church concealed Father Ridsdale’s crimes

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (updated 18 November 2013)

Why did Bishop George Pell accompany Father Gerald Francis Ridsdale to court on 27 May 1993 when Ridsdale was jailed for child-sex crimes? And why did no bishop, or even a priest, accompany the victims?

Father Ridsdale (with his features obscured by dark glasses and a cap) walked to the Melbourne Magistrates Court with his support person, Bishop Pell (wearing clerical garb).

That evening, Channel Nine’s news bulletin showed footage of Father Ridsdale and Bishop Pell arriving at the court. This bulletin was viewed throughout the state of Victoria, including by many church-abuse victims. Viewers noticed that a bishop was accompanying the criminal priest, rather than accompanying the victims.

This publicity alerted other Ridsdale victims, many of whom later rang the newly-established Broken Rites telephone hotline. Broken Rites told these callers the phone number of the Victoria Police child-abuse unit, where they could report Ridsdale’s crimes.

As police interviewed more of his victims, Ridsdale was brought back to court in 1994 and 2006 to be given additional time behind bars.

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Pope Francis, the poster boy for today’s Catholics

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Cristina Odone

When I read about the new Judi Dench film Philomena, my heart sank. Here was another tear-jerker which, like the earlier The Magdalene Sisters, exposed the abuse that unwed mothers suffered at the hands of the Catholic nuns who took them in. The image of the Church as a misogynist institution would have such a firm hold on the public’s imagination, no one would point out that many selfless and inspiring nuns were risking their lives in Latin America or Africa; no one would pay tribute to the teaching orders that had schooled millions of girls from the poorest families, filling them with ambition and the self-confidence to achieve it.

As the film premiered, I donned a tin hat and prepared myself for an open season on “cruel” Catholics. Except that it didn’t come. In its place, I have witnessed a dizzying, breathless love-fest. Its object, miraculously, is the new head of the Catholic Church, Pope Francis. Francis-mania has swept Catholic countries such as Italy, where churches are filling, and his native Argentina, where his name, Francisco, is now the most popular for newborn boys.

Part of the Pope’s extraordinary popularity is down to his charm. From the moment he stood on the balcony in St Peter’s Square, cracking a joke and inviting his audience around the world to go with him on a journey, Francis has appeared humble, warm-hearted, and inclusive: simpatico, as Italians would say. He has opted for a modest lifestyle – living in a hostel, driving a second-hand Peugeot, dispensing with bodyguards – which confirms that as far as he is concerned, “we are all in this together”.

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Corrientes: obispo pagó la fianza para liberar a cura acusado por pedofilia

ARGENTINA
Imneuquen

[Summary: Bishop Ricardo Faifer confirmed that he paid 50,000 pesos for bail to free a priest accused of molesting a minor. After release, the young man who said he was abused sent a letter to Pope Francis. Priest Domingo Pacheco, 45, was a prisoner since 2011 but was released on bail pending public trial to begin Dec. 9.]

Corrientes.- El obispo de la ciudad correntina de Goya, Ricardo Faifer, confirmó hoy que pagó una fianza de 50 mil pesos para que la Justicia de Corrientes otorgue la libertad a un sacerdote acusado de abusar sexualmente un menor de edad, reabriendo la polémica por la participación de curas en casos de pedofilia.

Tras la liberación del sacerdote procesado, el joven que denunció haber sufrido el abuso sexual le envió una carta al Papa Francisco en la que afirmó: “En Corrientes cuidan a los pedófilos”.

Domingo Pacheco, un sacerdote de 45 años de edad, estaba preso desde 2011, pero el viernes pasado quedó en libertad bajo caución, a la espera del juicio oral y público que comenzará el 9 de diciembre en el Tribunal Oral en lo Penal provincial de Goya.

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Buffalo Catholic Diocese Hotline Number for Victims of Child Abuse

NEW YORK
NBC News

By Hilary Lane
WKBW-TV

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) – The Buffalo Catholic Diocese says the confidential hotline number for anyone to report knowledge of child sexual abuse is back up and working.

Father Michael Kolodziej worked in the Buffalo area for about 15 years. Now that he is facing charges, the Buffalo Catholic Diocese is asking anyone who has knowledge of child sexual abuse to call a confidential hotline number.

That number is (716) 895-3010.

Father Kolodziej is accused of sexually abusing a student while he was a teacher at a Catholic school in Baltimore, Maryland. The alleged victim claims Father Kolodziej abused him several times while Kolodziej “wrestled him.” The alleged incidents occured from 1975 to 1979.

Now, the Buffalo diocese is asking anyone with knowledge of any type of sexual abuse to come forward and call a hotline number. One alleged victim called our newsroom and told us he tried to call, but couldn’t get through. We tried the hotline multiple times, but found only a busy signal. When we contacted the diocese about the problem, they said they would look into it. Shortly after 9 on Monday morning, the Buffalo Catholic Diocese has contact us saying the number is back up and working.

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Ridsdale pleads guilty to more crimes

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Steve Butcher Nov. 18, 2013

One of Australia’s – and Ballarat’s – worst paedophile former priests has admitted to multiple new offences against 14 victims.

Gerald Ridsdale pleaded guilty in the Melbourne Magistrates Court today, to the crimes committed in the 1960s and 1970s.

He had been eligible for parole last June after serving a long prison sentence for offences against 40 children in the 1960s and 1970s, and in 1980.

Ridsdale, 79, pleaded guilty to 30 charges, mostly indecent assault, against 14 victims which included three offences against a female.

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Vic priest Ridsdale an ‘evil hypocrite’

AUSTRALIA
7 News

PATRICK CARUANA –
November 18, 2013

For many Catholic families in western Victoria, Father Gerald Ridsdale was God’s representative in their community.

But in reality, he was one of the state’s worst ever pedophiles whose depraved crimes were later denounced by a County Court judge as reaching the “depths of evil hypocrisy”.

Ridsdale’s appalling history of child abuse began in 1961 – the year he was ordained as a priest.

He spent the next 26 years abusing dozens of children across regional Victoria, often using his privileged status as a priest to earn the trust of victims and their families before striking.

Broken Rites spokesman Wayne Chamley says Ridsdale’s heinous crimes have devastated entire communities.

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Paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale pleads guilty to new child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

One of Australia’s most notorious paedophiles has pleaded guilty to a series of new child sex charges.

Former Catholic priest Gerald Ridsdale has spent most of the past 20 years in prison for abusing dozens of children in western Victoria during the 1960s, 70s and 80s.

He became eligible for parole this year, but police recently charged him with more offences after more victims came forward.

Ridsdale appeared in the Melbourne Magistrates Court to enter his guilty plea.

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Paedophile priest guilty on new charges

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

One of Australia’s worst pedophile priests Gerald Ridsdale has admitted to fresh abuse charges against 14 children, including an altar boy he plied with wine before assaulting him.

The former Catholic priest has pleaded guilty to 30 new charges, with the bulk of those indecent assaults.

The charges date back to the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s and involve three girls and 11 boys.

Ridsdale, 79, pleaded guilty to the 30 charges in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on Monday.

Magistrate Ian Alger struck out another 54 charges.

When Mr Alger asked Ridsdale if he intended to plead guilty to the charges he replied: ‘I really wasn’t prepared for this.

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Paedophile Catholic priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale admits to 14 new victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Emily Portelli
From: Herald Sun
November 18, 2013

A NOTORIOUS paedophile priest plied an altar boy with wine and made a 10-year-old girl perform sexual acts in a confession box at a church where he was the parish priest, court documents reveal.

Gerald Francis Ridsdale, 79, this morning admitted to sexually abusing 14 children, including three siblings, bringing the total number of his victims to 45.

Court orders have been lifted to reveal publicly that the former Victorian Catholic priest pleaded guilty to 29 charges of sex offences against boys and girls at Melbourne Magistrates’ Court via videolink from prison, where he is serving a sentence.

The most recent charges of child sex abuse, committed between 1961 and 1980 at various regional Victorian towns where Ridsdale then resided, were laid in June this year, weeks before he would have been eligible for parole.

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Locked in a cell, tortured and abused: Magdalene Laundries survivor tells of her fight for justice

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

A brave woman who was thrown into a padded cell, had her hair shaved off and was given a boy’s name by nuns in the Magdalene Laundries has taken her fight for justice to the United Nations.

Terrified Elizabeth Coppin was just 14 when she was taken out of the Co Kerry industrial school she had attended for 12 years and “locked up” in the Peacock Lane Laundry in Cork.

She was never told why she was hauled away from everything she knew and dumped in the hated institution with the chilling warning: “It will be a very long time before you get out.”

And it was the start of a hellish four years in three laundries for Elizabeth where she was:

* FORCED to work long days with no pay

* MADE to sleep in a cell with bars over the window and only a bucket for a toilet

* LOCKED in a bare padded cell for three days after being falsely accused of stealing another girl’s sweets, and

* PUNISHED by having her beautiful hair shaved off and her named changed to Enda after she ran away to escape the nightmare.

Now 64, Elizabeth has returned home from England to Listowel, Co Kerry, to fight for justice for herself and the thousands of women like her who were treated like slaves in the Laundries.

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FSIN chief applauds extension for residential school commission

CANADA
StarPhoenix

BY JASON WARICK, THE STARPHOENIX
NOVEMBER 17, 2013

The chief of the Federation of Saskatchewan Indian Nations (FSIN) says he’s glad the commission investigating Canada’s Indian residential school system has been granted a one-year extension.

“I welcome the extension. It’s a positive thing,” FSIN Chief Perry Bellegarde said.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which has been conducting research and hearing testimony across the country for the past few years, was to have issued its final report in June 2014. Following calls for more time from various groups, federal Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Minister Bernard Valcourt announced the one-year extension to the commission.

“Our government remains committed to achieving a fair and lasting resolution to the legacy of Indian residential schools, which lies at the heart of reconciliation and the renewal of the relationship between aboriginal people and all Canadians,” Valcourt said in a statement.

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Mass walkout during service

SCOTLAND
Evening Times

Angela McManus
Monday 18/11/2013

THE suspension of a priest who spoke out about alleged homosexual bullying in the Catholic church led to a furious congregation walking out of mass in protest.

Only a handful of parishioners remained to take mass at St John Ogilvie’s Church in High Blantyre yesterday with the Archdiocese of Motherwell’s acting Bishop Joseph Toal after Father Matthew Despard was removed from his ministry the night before.

Before they went into church, people signed a petition calling for the reinstatement of Father Despard, suspended for writing a controversial memoir that claimed there is a culture of homosexual bullying in the church.

When Bishop Toal, accompanied by Father William Nolan, tried to take mass, Geraldine Penches said she wanted to make a statement and received a roar of applause from the congregation in a packed church in which many stood at the back.

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Parishioners walk out of mass for second time in support of priest suspended for claiming gay sex bullying is rife in church

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

PARISHIONERS yesterday walked out of mass for a second time in support of a suspended priest.

Father Matthew Despard has been removed from duties after he wrote a book claiming there is a culture of homosexual bullying in the Catholic Church.

Members of the congregation at St John Ogilvie’s walked out after a statement about his suspension was read to them.

One parishioner said: “People were angry and in disbelief.”

A similar protest was held before Saturday’s vigil mass when Bishop Joseph Toal, Acting Bishop of Motherwell, read out the statement at the church.

Some parishioners were so livid they didn’t even take communion from the bishop and left in tears.

They consoled Father Despard, who stood sobbing outside the church in High Blantyre, Lanarkshire.

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Gay clergy book row priest Father Matthew Despard suspended

SCOTLAND
BBC News

A priest who wrote a book alleging the Catholic Church in Scotland suffered from a “culture of homosexual bullying” has been suspended from his post.

Father Matthew Despard was removed from St John Ogilvie Church in Blantyre, part of the Archdiocese of Motherwell, by Bishop Joseph Toal on Saturday.

A case has been brought against him for breaking church or canon law.

Some parishioners voiced opposition to Father Despard’s removal and walked out during a service on Sunday.

In his book “Priesthood In Crisis”, Father Despard claimed that sexual misconduct was rife among the clergy and the church authorities did not take action when he alerted them to allegations.

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Congregation unite in protest at suspension of parish priest

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Only a handful of parishioners remained yesterday to take mass at St John Ogilvie’s Church in High Blantyre with Archdiocese of Motherwell acting Bishop Joseph Toal after Father Matthew Despard was removed from his ministry the night before.

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New bishop for diocese in abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The first woman to lead an Anglican diocese in Australia says the church has made the cultural changes needed to address the issue of child sexual abuse.

The incoming Anglican Bishop of Grafton, the Reverend Dr Sarah Macneil, says her new diocese has been up front about admitting failings in how it handled abuse allegations.

On the same day as her appointment was announced, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse began hearings into how the Grafton Diocese responded to abuse allegations at a Lismore children’s home.

Her appointment follows former bishop of Grafton Keith Slater’s resignation and apology for mishandling abuse claims at the North Coast Children’s Home.

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Beaten, raped, starved by the church – an Australian story

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

CANDACE SUTTON
From: news.com.au
November 18, 2013

BEATEN till they bled.

Starved. Sexually abused. Locked in cupboards.

Their faces rubbed in their own faeces and urine.

And then the ministers came over from the neighbouring church and the sexual abuse began.

This was not some overseas house of horrors, but Australia; the lush green hills and subtropical rainforest of northern NSW, where the Anglican Church of Australia carried out the abuse of hundreds of children.

This is the story of how the Church of England North Coast Children’s Home held a dark secret for decades.

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Anglican North Coast Children’s Home under Royal Commission spotlight

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse is preparing to publicly examine the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore. The public hearings slated for the next two weeks will investigate how complaints of abuse were handled by the Anglican Diocese of Grafton, which ran the home, and the legal action that occurred in 2006 and 2007. In the face of dozens of claims, the Anglican Church resisted the legal action by denying it had a duty of care to the orphans who were abused in the home. Later, it offered a financial settlement and apologised to victims.

Transcript

TONY EASTLEY: When victims began to make claims of abuse at an Anglican run children’s home in Lismore in New South Wales in 2005, the Anglican Church argued it didn’t have a duty of care to the orphans who were abused at the home.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will begin its third public inquiry today, and the focus is on the North Coast Children’s Home.

The public hearing will investigate how complaints of abuse were handled, how the group claim was settled and what happened when other former residents of the orphanage came forward.

AM’s Emily Bourke reports.

EMILY BOURKE: The Anglican Church ran the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore from the 1940s to the 1980s.

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‘You hope for death to stop the pain,’ abuse survivor tells royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From: The Australian
November 18, 2013

FOR the child abuse survivor known as CK, a recent cancer diagnosis was the best news he’d ever had. “The pain will stop,” he told an inquiry today.

In graphic evidence given this morning to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Assault, the former resident of a children’s home, placed there when he was just three years old, described a “pedophile ring” operating there.

Children living at the home in the Anglican Diocese of Grafton in northern NSW were beaten, raped and sexually abused by priests, only for the church to spend years fighting their subsequent attempts to seek compensation, the inquiry heard.

So great was the damage done to him and dozens of other children, that many, including his brother, had since committed suicide.

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Children at Anglican children’s home…

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Children at Anglican children’s home in Lismore were physically and sexually abused by clergy and staff, Royal Commission is told

Jim O’Rourke
From: The Daily Telegraph
November 18, 2013

CHILDREN were beaten with pony whips and canes at an Anglican Church children’s home in Lismore, the Royal. Commission into child sexual abuse heard today.

Priests also performed sexual “cleansing” ceremonies on young boys, the opening day of the comission’s third public hearing in Sydney was told.

In his opening address, counsel assisting, Simeon Beckett, said children as young as five were forced to perform oral sex on older residents.

Mr Beckett said children were sexually abused by clergy, staff and fellow residents between 1944 and 1985.

The hearings will also hear evidence about how the Anglican Church handled allegations of abuse and violence and dealt with claims for compensation.

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Sexual abuse victim welcomed cancer diagnosis, hearing told

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 18, 2013

Paul Bibby
Court Reporter

So devastating was the physical and sexual abuse suffered by a young boy at an Anglican Church-run children’s home in northern NSW that, years later, he welcomed a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer because it meant “the pain will stop”, the royal commission has heard.

And yet when this victim and scores of others launched a class action against the church in the early 2000s, the church allegedly did “everything in its power” to avoid taking responsibility for the abuse inflicted by its clergy, often acting in its name.

“The Anglican Church did everything in its power to be a hindrance in this case,” the man, referred to as “CK” said during a gut-wrenching 90 minutes of evidence before the commission on Monday.

“It deliberately dragged the case out, knowing that the impact on us was a beneficial outcome for the church.

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Gallup diocese’s bankruptcy hearing starts

NEW MEXICO
ABQ Journal

By Olivier Uyttebrouck / Journal Staff Writer

Attorneys who faced off for the first time in a bankruptcy case filed by the Diocese of Gallup warned an Albuquerque judge to expect a difficult and emotional case involving the sexual abuse of children by priests.

The Diocese of Gallup last week became the nation’s ninth Roman Catholic diocese to file for Chapter 11 reorganization bankruptcy in response to a growing number of lawsuits filed by alleged victims of clerical sex abuse.

“Money is an issue,” said James Stang, a Los Angeles attorney who specializes in representing claimants in bankruptcies filed by Roman Catholic dioceses. “But it’s also about fairness, justice, healing – things you don’t ordinarily have to contend with” in a bankruptcy case, he said.

Victims of sexual abuse by priests also expect “transparency and sunshine” from the Roman Catholic Church, Stang told U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge David Thuma in a hearing Friday.

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Brutal assaults at a NSW orphanage

AUSTRALIA
7 News

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL –
November 18, 2013

Children were beaten until they were bloodied and forced into sex with older residents at a NSW orphanage run by the Anglican church, the royal commission has heard.

On an emotional day at the commission, one former resident of the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore described himself and other abuse victims as the “walking dead”, while those who took their own lives are the lucky ones.

Other children, some as young as five, were allegedly forced to have oral sex with older residents.

The national royal commission into institutional responses to child sex is hearing from people who were residents at the Lismore home in the Anglican diocese of Grafton between 1944 and 1985.

In a tearful voice, a witness called CK, who was placed in the home aged three with his six-year-old brother in 1949, told how his older sibling used to protect him until he was moved to another home when CK was eight.

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Horrifying evidence from former orphans of North Coast Children’s Home

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

MARK COLVIN: The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard horrific personal accounts from former residents of the New South Wales North Coast Children’s Home.

The national inquiry is delving into the stories of children who were abused at the Anglican-run children’s home between the 1940s and 1980s and how the Church responded to allegations over the past decade.

Witnesses at the hearings in Sydney today told harrowing tales from the Lismore orphanage of children living in appalling deprivation, accompanied by extreme brutality and ritualised sexual abuse.

Emily Bourke has this report, and a warning that some of the content in this report may distress some listeners.

EMILY BOURKE: The royal commission’s third public hearing has heard of childhoods ruined and adult lives cut short by suicide as result of abuse that occurred in the North Coast Children’s Home which was run by the Anglican Church.

CK: The pain that we have, we will take to the grave. The ones who have suicided, they’re possibly the lucky ones. We’re the living dead that remain.

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Church ‘denied controlling orphanage where children were abused’

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Sunday 17 November 2013

The Anglican church denied it had control of a New South Wales orphanage where children were horribly abused when victims sought compensation, a witness has told a hearing in Sydney.

Tommy Campion gave evidence to the royal commission into child sex abuse on Monday saying that when a group of people pursued the church for compensation in 2005, the response was that it was not a church institution.

Campion, a former press photographer, has become the public face of those who survived the abuse. He was a resident at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, from 1947 when he was two years old until 1964.

He told the hearing he wrote a five-page letter to the Anglican Grafton diocese in 2005 outlining the “complete and utter hell” children went through at the home.

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Anglican bishop of Grafton Sarah Macneil says ….

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Anglican bishop of Grafton Sarah Macneil says timing of appointment is ‘messy’ as diocese appears before royal commission

November 18, 2013

Heath Gilmore
Reporter

The Anglican church’s first female bishop has described the announcement of her historical appointment as “messy” after it was brought forth at the same time a royal commission focused on her new diocese.

The Reverend Dr Sarah Macneil, 58, was elected unanimously as the 11th bishop of the Anglican diocese of Grafton.

Her appointment was announced at church services on Sunday, a day before the Anglican church and Grafton diocese appeared before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Her predecessor, Keith Slater, resigned in May this year for his failings in handling complaints about sexual abuse and brutal beatings at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, which operated under the Grafton diocese.

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Victims of Pedophile Aussie Priest Reaches 45 As He Admits to New Charges

AUSTRALIA
International Business Times

By Vittorio Hernandez | November 18, 2013

Defrocked Victorian Catholic paedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale admitted on Monday morning to the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court through a videolink from his cell to 14 more sexual abuses of children.

With his new admission, the number of the young male and female victims of the 79-year-old former priest goes up to 45. He committed them between the 1961 and 1982.

His new admission would affect Mr Ridsdale’s eligibility for parole which is up in the coming weeks.

He has been in jail since 1994 for sexual offences against 21 victims – 20 boys and 1 girl. His victims rose to 31 when he was convicted of more charges in 2006 for sexual abuse of 10 more boys from 1970 to 1987.

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November 17, 2013

Royal Commission examines Newcastle and Grafton dioceses

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Royal Commission into child sexual abuse will this week look at how the Anglican Dioceses of Newcastle and Grafton responded to allegations of abuse against a reverend of the church.

The third public hearing of the Royal Commission begins in Sydney today.

It will examine the response by the Anglican Diocese of Grafton to claims of child abuse at the North Coast Children’s home in Lismore.

The home was set up in the 1930s to look after orphans or abandoned children.

It is estimated that at least 200 children were sexually and physically abused there up until the 1980s.

One of the victims is Tommy Campion, who was sent to the home when he was just two years old.

His sister was four.

“My mother ran away, and so my father had us so he put us in the home,” he said.

The 65-year-old says the 14 years he spent at the home were hell, with children being sexually abused, humiliated and flogged by the matrons and clergymen in charge.

“Beaten with sticks, belts, electric cords. At times he would use a belt buckle until the kid was left there bleeding and crying.

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Anglican church examines more abuse cases on NSW north coast

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse will be preparing to publicly examine the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore. David Hanger from the Professional Standards Committee says the people who handled the complaints at the time were concerned about the Church’s financial exposure. He says the diocese is currently handling several other cases from the orphanage and they’ve referred some matters to police.

Transcript

TONY EASTLEY: Two months ago, the Anglican Diocese of Grafton in northern New South Wales publicly apologised to victims who suffered abuse over decades at the children’s home in Lismore.

The apology came several months after the Anglican Bishop of Grafton, Keith Slater, resigned, admitting he failed to properly manage the allegations and had turned victims away.

The diocese says it’s currently handling more cases from the orphanage and they’ve referred some matters to police.

David Hanger is chair of the Professional Standards Committee for the Diocese of Grafton.

He’s speaking here to AM’s Emily Bourke.

DAVID HANGER: What we discovered in terms of our failures was a real wake up call for us as a diocese. The outcome of that has been a deep sense of shame, a deep sense of repentance, a deep sense of wanting to ensure that we respond appropriately to what’s happened in the past and in the future. And that’s an attitudinal change for us.

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Anglican North Coast Children’s Home under Royal Commission spotlight

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

TONY EASTLEY: When victims began to make claims of abuse at an Anglican run children’s home in Lismore in New South Wales in 2005, the Anglican Church argued it didn’t have a duty of care to the orphans who were abused at the home.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will begin its third public inquiry today, and the focus is on the North Coast Children’s Home.

The public hearing will investigate how complaints of abuse were handled, how the group claim was settled and what happened when other former residents of the orphanage came forward.

AM’s Emily Bourke reports.

EMILY BOURKE: The Anglican Church ran the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore from the 1940s to the 1980s.

In 2005, former residents from the home started coming forward, alleging physical, psychological and sexual abuse, dating back decades.

How the Church responded to those complaints and what redress it offered will now be dissected by the Royal Commission.

TOMMY CAMPION: I was still fighting and fighting when Julia Gillard stood up an announced a Royal Commission, and I felt safe then.

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Royal commission hearing starts into Lismore children’s home

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard sexual and physical abuse was both severe and far reaching at a home run by the Anglican Church in northern New South Wales.

The commission this morning began its third round of public hearings, this time to examine the alleged sexual and physical abuse of up to 200 children at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore.

Counsel assisting the commission Simeon Beckett told the opening in Sydney this morning that the hearing will consider what happened at the home and how the Anglican Diocese of Grafton responded to allegations of abuse.

“The conditions for the children in the home were harsh. In at least the 1950s and 60s food and clothing were limited,” he said.

“Former residents have provided accounts to the royal commission that the children were often hungry.

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Priest removed after publication of tell-all memoir

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

A PRIEST who wrote a controversial book claiming there was a culture of homosexual bullying within the Catholic Church in Scotland has been suspended.

Parishioners at St John Ogilvie’s Church in High Blantyre, South Lanarkshire, reportedly reacted angrily and walked out after being told shortly before mass that their parish priest Father Matthew Despard had been removed from the ministry.

Father Despard alleged in his self-published memoir Crisis In The Priesthood that sexual misconduct had been rife for decades in seminaries where teenagers train for the priesthood.

Parishioners had been greeted by a weeping Father Despard outside the church as they arrived for the 4:30pm mass on Saturday. Bishop Joseph Toal, Acting Bishop of the Diocese of Motherwell, read out a statement informing them “a penal ­judicial process” had been instituted against Father Despard.

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Paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale admits new child sex offences

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 18, 2013

Steve Butcher

One of Australia’s worst paedophile former priests has admitted to multiple new offences against 14 victims.

Gerald Ridsdale on Monday pleaded guilty in the Melbourne Magistrates Court to the crimes committed in the 1960s and 1970s.

He had been eligible for parole last June after serving a long prison sentence for offences against 40 children between 1961 and 1987.

Ridsdale, 79, pleaded guilty to 30 charges, mostly indecent assault, against 14 victims which included three offences against a female.

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Ex-Priest to Go on Trial on Sex Charges in Canada

CANADA
ABC News

IQALUIT, Nunavut November 17, 2013 (AP)

A former Roman Catholic priest goes on trial Monday on multiple sex-related charges involving Inuit children in a tiny arctic hamlet nearly 18 years after he fled to his homeland of Belgium to avoid prosecution.

Eric Dejaeger has pleaded not guilty to 76 sex-related charges and will be tried by a judge alone. The charges involve 41 complainants and 26 people from the hamlet of Igloolik on the Melville Peninsula are expected to testify.

Dejaeger was returned to Canada from Belgium in January 2011 for an immigration violation rather than on an extradition order. A Belgian journalist realized that Dejaeger had lost his Belgian citizenship in 1977 when he became a naturalized Canadian. He was kicked out because he had been living in Belgium since 1995 without a visa.

An Inuit woman who was among the alleged victims in Igloolik said she was relieved that the former priest is finally going to face trial..

“It’s almost a relief,” said the woman, who cannot be identified under a court order. “We were told that he was never going to be found. And when he came back to life and came to Canada, that was a shock to all of us.”

The charges against Dejaeger include allegations from February 1995 when he was originally charged with three counts of indecent assault and three counts of buggery, a charge no longer in the Criminal Code. They relate to his time as a priest in Igloolik between 1978 and 1982, where he was sent to serve the indigenous community by the Belgian Oblates, an order of Catholic priests.

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Some Victorian Victims’ Comments (Or: Real Voices)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will resume hearings tomorrow. It will be the third “case study”, and will focus on Allan Kitchingman (see previous posting) against the background of events at the North Coast Children’s Home (see previous posting).

The commission officials need to heed the comments of victims and their supporters, following the release of the Victorian Parliamentary enquiry, which was released last week (see previous posting). While the officials admit to a steep learning curve in their own interactions with victims, the process of understanding, and appropriate responses for their future investigations, will be enhanced if they take serious note of those victim comments made last week.

Space does not permit a full listing of comments, but more will be covered in other postings where possible. Here are some of the comments on the Victorian report.

Anthony and Chrissie Foster’s daughters, Emma and Katie, were repeatedly raped by their parish priest, Father Kevin O’Donnell, at their primary school in Melbourne’s south-east, from 1987 until 1992.The Catholic Church had received numerous complaints about O’Donnell’s crimes dating back to the 1940s, but no action was ever taken. Emma Foster suicided and her sister Katie was seriously disabled when she was hit by a car, and now requires 24-hour care.

Mr. Foster commented that “There’s mixed feelings, of course, it brings back some sadness with our children. But we feel that this report has the basis for everything that we want. We need to make sure that the Church and other organisations can’t just draw a line today and say ‘we’re forgetting about everything behind and we’re on with the future and yes we’ll toe the line now’. There are some big organisations out there that are going to be trying to protect their wealth, because this has always been about the wealth and reputation of organisations like the Salvation Army, the Catholic Church.”

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Anglicans elect first woman bishop

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Anglican church has appointed its first female bishop in Australia, who will take charge of a NSW diocese at the centre of a Royal Commission into child sex abuse.

The Reverend Dr Sarah Macneil has been elected unanimously as the 11th Bishop of the Anglican diocese of Grafton.

The Sunday night announcement comes a day before the Anglican church and the Grafton diocese in particular is due to appear before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which will open in Sydney on Monday.

Dr Macneil replaces Keith Slater.

He resigned in May this year, apologising for his failings in handling complaints about sexual abuse and brutal beatings that took place at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, which was run by the Grafton diocese of the Anglican church.

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Bishop speaks out after senior priest found guilty

UNITED KINGDOM
Lancashire Evening Post

THE Bishop of Lancaster has spoken of his “profound sorrow” after a senior catholic priest was convicted of historic sexual offences.

The Right Reverend Michael Campbell, has spoken out after Canon Stephen Shield, 53, the Dean at Lancaster Cathedral, was found guilty of abuse over a seven year period.

Canon Shield is facing jail after being convicted of sexually assaulting a man in the presbytery of English Martyrs church in Preston.

He committed the offences more than two decades ago against a man who hoped to join the priesthood.

He was convicted at Preston Crown Court on Friday and is due to be sentenced on December 13.

Bishop Campbell said: “I want to express my profound sorrow and deepest regret to the victim for the abusive behaviour perpetrated by Canon Shield.

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Canberra’s Sarah Macneil to become Australia’s first female Anglican bishop

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

November 18, 2013

Peter Jean
Chief Assembly reporter for The Canberra Times.

With a real sense that she is answering God’s call, Sarah Macneil will next year be installed as the 11th bishop of Grafton and the first woman to head an Anglican diocese in Australia.

The announcement of the Canberra priest’s appointment comes as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse begins public hearings into the Grafton Diocese’s response to claims of child sexual abuse at a Lismore children’s home.

Dr Macneil is married, a grandmother and a former Australian diplomat.

She is a former dean of Adelaide and archdeacon in the diocese of Canberra-Goulburn.

Dr Macneil will give up her role as senior associate priest at Holy Covenant Church in Jamison, to lead a diocese with 28 parishes, taking in major centres such as Lismore, Ballina, Coffs Harbour and Port Macquarie.

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Anglicans elect first woman bishop

AUSTRALIA
9 News

The Anglican church has appointed its first female bishop in Australia, who will take charge of a NSW diocese at the centre of a Royal Commission into child sex abuse.

The Reverend Dr Sarah Macneil has been elected unanimously as the 11th Bishop of the Anglican diocese of Grafton.

The Sunday night announcement comes a day before the Anglican church and the Grafton diocese in particular is due to appear before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which will open in Sydney on Monday.

Dr Macneil replaces Keith Slater.

He resigned in May this year, apologising for his failings in handling complaints about sexual abuse and brutal beatings that took place at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore, which was run by the Grafton diocese of the Anglican church.

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Pastor of Oakdale Catholic church accepted $120,000 check from elderly parishioner

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Laura Yuen, Minnesota Public Radio
November 15, 2013

The Maplewood Police Department recently closed an investigation into the Rev. Rodger Bauman, an Oakdale priest who accepted a $120,000 check from a 99-year-old former parishioner. Bauman has maintained all along that the money was a gift. He eventually returned it.

No charges were ever filed. But the circumstances surrounding the money raised concerns among the man’s caregivers, the woman serving as his power of attorney and a police detective, who investigated Bauman on suspicion of swindling a vulnerable adult.

The man who wrote the check, Lou Dziengel, lived in an assisted living home in Maplewood. He got around with a walker, wore two hearing aids and, by at least one account, was rough around the edges.

“Very stubborn. He wanted things his way,” said the woman who served as his power of attorney. Her name has been redacted from police reports, and MPR News has agreed not to identify her. “There was a certain way to do things, and a certain way you didn’t do things.”

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Bracing for the truth

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Dan Box
From: The Australian
November 18, 2013

EMILY was eight days short of her third birthday when she was taken from her parents by a magistrate in Bowral, in the NSW Southern Highlands, and “committed to the care” of the state government, court records show.

Despite her parents’ desperate attempts to get her back, and her own struggles to tell government workers what was happening, Emily (not her real name) was placed with a foster father who raped her repeatedly for years.

At the time, she feels, nobody listened. “The pain never really goes away,” says the 54-year-old, who now lives in Innisfail, in far north Queensland. ” Recently I have been told that I have a meeting with the royal commission. I felt relief, sheer relief someone is going to take notice.”

GRAPHIC: Scale of the task

Today, the federal Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse begins the first of two major public hearings, not into Emily’s case itself, but into the thing she says later saved her life – the church.

Many within the two denominations facing investigation, Anglican and Catholic, expect the evidence to be an ordeal. Indeed, they say, it needs to be if these institutions are to find redemption after what has taken place.

Explicitly, no one organisation will be the focus of the royal commission’s work. At the time it was established, last November, the then prime minister Julia Gillard said: “This is a royal commission that would be looking across religious organisations, as well as state-based care and into the not-for-profit sector.”

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Royal Commission begins in Sydney

AUSTRALIA
NEWS.com.au

NOVEMBER 18, 2013

BRUTAL bashings and the sexual abuse of children under the care of the Anglican church in NSW will be examined at the next round of public hearings in a national inquiry.

The third case study by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will open in Sydney on Monday.

It will look at the response of the Anglican Diocese of Grafton to claims of child sexual abuse at the North Coast Children’s Home in Lismore.

The diocese’s handling of a group compensation claim will also be examined.

The Bishop of Grafton, Keith Slater, resigned in May this year and apologised for his failings in handling complaints about the orphanage.

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Mountain of evidence swamping child sexual-abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN NOVEMBER 18, 2013

THE royal commission into institutional child sexual abuse has referred dozens of cases to police forces across the country as it works through a mountain of evidence, including hundreds of thousands of documents generated in its first few months of operation.

Since it began sitting in April, the federal Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has referred 44 cases to police for further investigation and served close

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«Der Italiener per se ist kein Hochrisikokunde»

VATIKAN
Neue Zurcher Zeitung

Der Papst hat der Vatikanbank eine Weissgeldstrategie verordnet. Durchsetzen soll sie ein Schweizer, der den Finanzplatz Liechtenstein reformierte. René Brühlhart nimmt im Interview Stellung zum neuen Risikoprofil für Kunden der Vatikanbank, dem Fall Scarano und zur Aufarbeitung der Altlasten

Interview: Zoé Baches, Simon Gemperli

Herr Brülhart, der Vatikan-Prälat Nunzio Scarano ist im Sommer unter Geldwäscherei-Verdacht verhaftet worden. Die Chefs der Vatikanbank traten zurück. Ist das eine Zäsur in der Geschichte dieser Bank?

Es sind sicher Fakten, die zeigen, dass die eingeleiteten Massnahmen zu greifen beginnen. Gestützt auf Verdachtsmeldungen wurden zum ersten Mal in der Geschichte des Vatikans Vermögenssperren vorgenommen. Ebenfalls zum ersten Mal wurde aktiv ein Rechtshilfegesuch an Italien gestellt.

Ist der Fall Scarano die Spitze des Eisbergs?

Ich kann nicht ausschliessen, dass es der letzte Fall dieser Art war. Wir analysieren zurzeit weitere Fälle. Entscheidend ist, dass wir heute die entsprechenden Instrumente für diese Aufarbeitung in der Hand haben. Zudem sind wir auch präventiv tätig.

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What some are saying as former priest goes on trial in Nunavut

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
NOVEMBER 17, 2013

IQALUIT, Nunavut – What some people are saying as former priest Eric Dejaeger faces a trial on 76 historical sex charges in Nunavut:

“It came back all of a sudden. I felt numb. And then I saw his picture after 30 years. I wasn’t even crying, yet the tears were coming down really hard. Some of us are getting more drunk. I’m trying to drink more. Some of us are being more abusive towards our common-law husband or wife. Some of us are getting into troubles here and there.” — One of Dejaeger’s alleged victims speaking from Igloolik in 2011 after hearing news that Dejaeger had been arrested in Belgium and was coming back to Canada

“It’s not so hard any more. I am moving on and I need to find a way to forgive him, and I’m trying, and I want to. Maybe that way it will be easier for me. I’m doing good. I’m not a drunk any more. What he did is bound to come back to him.” — The same person in 2013, days before Dejaeger’s trial was to begin

“When he was here, he acted as though he was a really decent man. We thought he was someone who was a friend.” — Former Igloolik mayor Lucasie Ivalu

“We all make mistakes” — Text of a badge worn by Eric Dejaeger when he pleaded guilty to nine counts of abuse in 1991

“I heard that Eric was told — off the record — to leave Canada by several organizations including the courts, his lawyers and some Oblates.” — Georges Vervust, Oblate provincial for Belgium, suggesting how Dejaeger may have been able to escape Canada after a second batch of charges were laid in 1995.

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A timeline of events in Nunavut abuse case involving former priest

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS
NOVEMBER 17, 2013

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A timeline of events in the case against former priest Eric Dejaeger, who faces a trial on 76 historical sex charges in Nunavut:

June 28, 1973: Dejaeger, 26, leaves Belgium for Canada to study for the Catholic priesthood with the Oblate order. He visits several Arctic missions and stays briefly in Pelly Bay, N.W.T. (now Kugaaruk, Nunavut).

May 1974: Leaves Pelly Bay for Edmonton.

1977: Takes out Canadian citizenship and is consecrated as a deacon in Repulse Bay, Nunavut.

1978: Ordained as a priest after studies at Edmonton’s Newman Theological College. Posted to Igloolik, Nunavut.

1982: Posted to Baker Lake, Nunavut.

April 1989: Asked by Oblates to leave Baker Lake.

Aug. 21, 1989: Arrested in Langley, B.C., where he is studying Inuktitut.

Dec. 19, 1989: Pleads guilty to eight counts of sexual assault and one charge of indecent assault in Baker Lake. Sentenced to five years.

June 14, 1991: Pleads guilty to two additional counts of sexual assault in Baker Lake after being charged with five. Sentences to be served concurrently.

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As trial begins for Dutch priest, northern community hopes to move on

CANADA
Calgary Herald

BY BOB WEBER, THE CANADIAN PRESS NOVEMBER 17, 2013

IQALUIT, Nunavut – The worst is already over, says one of the dozens of alleged victims of a disgraced priest whose trial on 76 sex-related charges involving Inuit children is to begin Monday.

“It’s almost a relief,” the woman said recently from her home in Igloolik, Nunavut, the community where most of the charges against Eric Dejaeger from 18 years ago are based.

Dejaeger was supposed to be tried in 1995 for his activities as an Oblate priest in the tiny Arctic hamlet on the Melville Peninsula. Instead, he fled to his homeland of Belgium — some say with the tacit consent of Canadian justice officials.

It was as if he’d returned from the dead when he was brought back in January 2011 after Belgium kicked him out for immigration violations, the woman said.

“We were told that he was never going to be found. And when he came back to life and came to Canada, that was a shock to all of us.”

That shock rocked Igloolik’s 1,500 residents.

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Canada let priest charged with sex abuse leave to Belgium: Oblate official

CANADA
Edmonton Journal

BY BOB WEBER, THE CANADIAN PRESS NOVEMBER 17, 2013

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A former priest who this week is to face 76 sex charges involving Inuit children may have been tried years ago but for a quiet nod from Canada that allowed him to leave the country, says a church leader.

Georges Vervust is the top official with the Belgian Oblates, an order of Catholic priests that sent Eric Dejaeger to several communities in what is now Nunavut.

Vervust sheds light on questions that have troubled Dejaeger’s alleged victims for nearly a decade: How was a man facing child abuse charges allowed to leave the country days before his trial? And why did it take so long for him to be returned?

“What I have heard is that he got advice from people from the Justice Department, off the record, that he should leave,” Vervust said in a Belgian documentary. He confirmed his comments to The Canadian Press.

Dejaeger’s trial beginning Monday includes allegations from Feb. 19, 1995, when he was originally charged with three counts of indecent assault and three counts of buggery, a charge no longer in the Criminal Code. They relate to his time as a priest in the community of Igloolik between 1978 and 1982.

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You can do it

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

Posted on November 17, 2013 by Sylvia

The long-awaited sex abuse trial of Father Eric Dejaeger omi starts tomorrow morning (Monday, 18 November 2013) at 09:30 am in Iqaluit, Nunavut.

The trial is scheduled to last five weeks. That of course can change, both ways. It could be over earlier if the Crown and defence manage to move through the witnesses faster than anticipated, and, on the other hand, it could last longer if there are glitches with witnesses, or, for example, – and Heaven forbid! – if Dejaegwer decides to claim that his Charter right to speedy trial has been violated. If Dejaeger has not waived his right to make that claim then it is a possibility. I hope and pray he doesn’t stoop that low to try to get off on a technicality like that. Trying to go that route would not necessarily mean victory, but it could tie things up for a good spell.

As always, we shall see

Keep the complainants in your prayers. Many will be preparing to fly in to Iqaluit from Igloolik and other areas to testify. It’s taken a long long time for all of them waiting for this day to come. I pray that each and everyone of them has his or her day in court, and that all stay strong, and keep their heads and cool under cross-examination.

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“We Bishops Are Responsible” – At Guadalupe, Chaput’s “New World”

UNITED STATES
Whispers in the Loggia

For everything that was different about this week’s Baltimore Plenary, there was a bit of deja vu in the air… well, besides Archbishop Allen Vigneron being denied the Divine Worship chair for the fourth straight time – now an apparent custom of the bench, going all the way back to 2005.

In one of this week’s great surprises, for the second time running, Archbishop Charles Chaput was the runner-up for a seat in the USCCB’s topmost leadership. The result made for a rather striking contrast to this meeting’s run-up as, going into the sessions, many felt this was his protege’s hour, with the votes accordingly to swing – beyond being head of the largest diocese these shores have ever known, Archbishop José Gomez had become the first Hispanic in recent memory to make the USCCB’s presidential slate, and the choice of the Mexican-born Angeleno ecclesially bred in Texas was advanced by his champions as an evocative, providential amplification of both the Latino ascendancy into Stateside Catholicism’s largest ethnic group, as well as the source of the first-ever American pontificate, albeit south of the border.

Yet when Decision Time came, Don José’s mentor – a veteran of the last five 10-man slates (more than any other contender) – edged again into the runoff by all of one vote.

Of course, the demographic and Roman fronts aren’t the only ways the world has changed since the 2010 Fall Classic. Keeping with Rome’s long-standing habit for the almost-vice-president of the US bishops, eight months after last time’s near-miss, Chaput was sent to the country’s next open cardinalatial see… yet even if he’s the lone US prelate to occupy the chair once held by a saint, to describe the modern-day archdiocese of Philadelphia as any sort of “consolation prize” would simply be perverse. …

From the outset – indeed, even before a months-long forensic audit revealed the grotesque picture in its full light – this was already perceived to be the most difficult situation an American bishop has faced in the last half-century. Now, having watched the most determined, unflappable figure on the US bench look as if he’s aged 20 years over the last 26 months – at points doubled over in anguish and grabbing his head over what he was made to inherit – it seems safe to say that taking on this inferno would’ve killed anyone else. But to know Chaput – the guy who, once upon a time, famously played a younger priest into a heart attack on the racquetball court – is to know that, where it matters most, the Capuchin always comes to win.

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How The Paedophile-Catchers Responded (Or: Thanks, Mate)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

There are those who support and advocate for victims of child sexual abuse. There are also those who get them justice. Most of the Australian general public are familiar with the part played by Detective Chief Inspector Peter Fox (see previous postings), revealed during the New South Wales State Government enquiry which finished recently.

The media has unearthed the role played by his counter-parts in the Victorian state system, and dubbed them the “paedophile catchers”.

[Most of the following comes from reports in the Warrnambool Standard newspaper and NewsCorp publications, and is provided for the record, in the light of the mixed assessment of Victorian Police, in the past, contained in the report.]

Detective Senior Sergeant, Chris O’Connor, recently retired after having been Victoria State Police’s child sex expert for decades. He has given his views on the report of the Victorian State Parliamentary enquiry into clerical child sexual abuse in that state, which was released this week (see previous postings).

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