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 14, 2013

TRC given one year extension to complete mandate: Valcourt

CANADA
APTN

APTN National News
OTTAWA–The Harper government has given the Truth and Reconciliation Commission a one-year extension, Aboriginal Affairs Minister Bernard Valcourt said Thursday.

The TRC had been seeking the extension arguing it didn’t have time to go through over a million documents from federal government archives. The TRC was contemplating taking court action to force Ottawa into giving it the extension.

“This additional year would allow the (TRC) sufficient time to complete its mandate, including writing its final report and receiving those documents held at Library and Archives Canada,” said Valcourt in a statement. “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.”

The TRC’s extension will run until June 30, 2015.

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.

Statement by the Honourable Bernard Valcourt on the Mandate of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission

CANADA
Digital Journal

Canada NewsWire

OTTAWA, Nov. 14, 2013 /CNW/ – The Honourable Bernard Valcourt, Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development, issued the following statement today:

“I am pleased to announce that the Government of Canada will work with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the parties to the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement, as well as the Ontario Superior Court to provide the Commission with a one-year extension to its operating period, until June 30, 2015, as requested by the Commission.

This additional year would allow the Commission sufficient time to complete its mandate, including writing its final report and receiving those documents held at Library and Archives Canada that Canada provides during this period.

We look forward to continuing to assist the Truth and Reconciliation Commission with its important mandate and to meeting Canada’s obligations as set out in the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement.

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.”

This statement is also available on the Internet at www.aandc.gc.ca.

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 Shocking Scandal at the Heart of American Zen

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

Click here for the story.

Nov 14, 2013
Even Zen masters can be deviants. Inside the new book that unearths a disturbing pattern of affairs at the top of one of the largest Buddhist communities in the U.S.

A new ebook by New York Times religion columnist Mark Oppenheimer alleges what many in the American Buddhist community have known for years: that some of its most revered teachers were also serial sex offenders.

Case in point: Eido Shimano Roshi. The founder and leader of New York’s Zen Studies Society—among the largest Western Buddhist communities in America, with prominent CEOs and celebrities among its members—Shimano carried on clandestine affairs with over a dozen women in his community over the course of thirty years, according to Oppenheimer’s provocatively titled Zen Predator of the Upper East Side. The book is a devastating indictment of Shimano Roshi, filled with hard evidence of the affairs and the cover-ups, the testimony of several victims, and occasionally lurid details. It even includes Shimano’s own confession to having sex with some students, though, he says, “far fewer” than his accusers allege.

As with many religious sex scandals, this is old news to insiders. Other Zen roshis with similar allegations against them include Richard Baker, Joshu Sasaki, Taizan Maezumi—the list goes on, really. The pattern is disturbingly familiar from Catholic, Ultra-Orthodox Jewish, and similar systematic abuse scandals: insiders made aware, positive values of spiritual teacher stressed, abuse hushed up, abuse repeated.

Yet in Shimano’s case, the facts are murkier. First, all of his “victims,” if that’s even the right word, were adults; this was not a case of predation of teenagers, as in the Catholic Church. Second, none were raped, in the narrowest (and legal) sense of the term. And while some sexual acts are alleged to have been coerced, most of Shimano’s reported liaisons were consensual—that is, if there can ever be consent within a power relationship such as that between guru and disciple, which perhaps there cannot. Finally, while Shimano was married, it’s not known what his wife made of the allegations, or when she knew of them.

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Bishop: We didn’t do all that much in Baltimore

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Nov. 14, 2013 NCR Today
Fall bishops’ meeting 2013

The U.S. bishops did little actual business during their annual plenary assembly in Baltimore this week, one bishop and former associate and general secretary of the bishops’ conference wrote.
In years past, says St. Petersburg, Fla., Bishop Robert Lynch, the bishops “struggled” to fit a full agenda into a three day time-frame.

This time, he states: “Other than approving some necessary liturgical texts, giving permission to a committee to develop a pastoral statement on pornography, we didn’t do a lot to advance the kingdom of God on earth — at least publicly.”

Lynch, who served in his roles at the conference from 1984 to 1995, made the statement about this year’s assembly in a posting at his personal diocesan blog.

The bishops met for their annual assembly at a Baltimore hotel Monday through Wednesday. Sessions Monday and Tuesday morning were open to the press while the rest were held behind closed doors during so-called executive sessions.

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

St. Paul Police: KSTP ‘Inaccurate’ About Archdiocese Investigation

MINNESOTA
KAAL

Updated at: 11/14/2013
By: Jay Kolls

KSTP first reported Tuesday that sources confirmed two top officials at the Twin Cities Catholic Archdiocese were part of an investigation.

Sources tell KSTP it is connected to a child pornography case that has been reopened against a priest.

Those same sources say St. Paul Police want to know what Archbishop John Nienstedt and former Vicar General Father Peter Laird knew about the child pornography, when they knew it, and if they knew about it, why they didn’t report it to police in a timely manner.

A whistleblower has already, in several interviews, named Archbishop Nienstedt and Father Laird as leaders who knew about the possible child pornography and did not immediately turn it over to authorities.

St. Paul Police held a news conference to say our KSTP report was “inaccurate” and that the two church leaders are not the “focus of an investigation.” But, they stopped short of saying our story was wrong.

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.

John Furlong libel: Lawyer for journalist demands apology from ex-Olympics CEO

CANADA
CTV

Keven Drews, The Canadian Press
Published Thursday, November 14, 2013

VANCOUVER — The journalist accused of defaming the former head of the Vancouver Olympics is now accusing John Furlong of damaging her reputation.

Laura Robinson’s lawyer, Bryan Baynham, has sent a letter to Furlong’s legal counsel, demanding the former Vancouver Olympics’ CEO apologize for and retract statements made about his client during a recent media blitz.

In the Wednesday letter, Baynham also demanded Furlong remove a statement, “Enough is Enough,” from his personal website.

Baynham alleged Furlong’s statements were false and damaged Robinson’s “hard-earned reputation for independence and journalistic excellence.”

Baynham also alleged Robinson’s ability to earn a living as a lecturer and freelance journalist has been “severely affected.”

Furlong responded in an emailed statement that no apology is merited nor will be made, and his online posting will stand and he will continue to pursue the case in court.

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

Writer locked in legal battle with John Furlong demands apology

CANADA
Vancouver Sun

By LORI CULBERT, VANCOUVER SUN November 13, 2013

VANCOUVER — Two weeks after former 2010 Olympics CEO John Furlong accused Laura Robinson of harassment and shoddy journalism, the writer’s lawyer is demanding an apology and accusing Furlong of defaming his client in media interviews.

“Mr. Furlong’s false statements and the latest media assault he unleashed are very damaging to Ms Robinson,” says a letter her lawyer Bryan Baynham sent Wednesday to Furlong’s counsel, John Hunter.

“Please accept this letter as a demand for a full and complete retraction and an apology.”

She and Furlong are locked in a series of lawsuits over a story Robinson penned for the Georgia Straight a year ago alleging Furlong mistreated native students while a teacher at Northern B.C. residential schools more than 40 years ago.

In a series of media interviews two weeks ago, Furlong denied any wrongdoing, accused Robinson of spreading false accusations, and said the firestorm had affected his livelihood and personal life.

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.

Abbott’s response to child sexual abuse by clergy angers victims

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 15, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s support for Cardinal George Pell over child sex abuse is inappropriate and factually wrong, victims say.

This new controversy came as the Speaker of the Victorian Parliament, Ken Smith, accused the former Melbourne vicar-general, Gerald Cudmore, of committing perjury in evidence he gave to a parliamentary inquiry in 1993. Mr Smith said highly placed Catholics stifled his inquiry’s report.
Mr Abbott told Fairfax Radio that Cardinal Pell, a former Catholic archbishop of Melbourne, was the first senior cleric to take sexual abuse by clergy seriously.

Asked whether Cardinal Pell, now Archbishop of Sydney, carried any responsibility for the failures described by the report of the Victorian inquiry into the church’s handling of child sexual abuse, Mr Abbott said he hadn’t read it.

”As is pretty well known, I have a lot of time for George Pell … my understanding is that the first senior cleric who took this issue very seriously was in fact Cardinal Pell.”

The report, Betrayal of Trust, said the cardinal was reluctant to acknowledge and accept responsibility for the church’s failings on criminal child abuse. It also strongly condemned the current Catholic leadership, saying it trivialised and minimised abuse, treated it as ”a short-term embarrassment”, and betrayed the church’s purported values.

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.

Jewish child-sex claims inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

RACHEL BAXENDALE THE AUSTRALIAN NOVEMBER 15, 2013

THE umbrella organisation for Jewish welfare groups in Victoria has launched its own investigation and support scheme in response to new claims of child-sex abuse at Jewish children’s homes in the 1960s.

Jewish Care Victoria revealed yesterday it had been contacted in late September by three individuals alleging they had been abused in residential care.

The news came in the wake of the handing-down on Wednesday of the findings of the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious and other non-government organisations.

JCV president Mike Debinski said although his organisation understood it was not legally liable for the abuse, which occurred in children’s homes that no longer exist, the board of management felt a moral obligation to provide support to victims, given the history of previous Jewish community organisations that operated the homes.

“Our primary concern is for the welfare of anyone who may have experienced abuse,” he said. “We will assess all claims and are offering services such as counselling, case-management and support.”

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Priest convicted of sexually abusing young sisters steps up

NORTHERN IRELAND
Fermanagh Herald

A PRIEST who was convicted of sexually abusing three Fermanagh sisters more than 40 years ago is attempting to clear this name

Fr Eugene Lewis was jailed for four years in September 2010 for 11 counts of indecent assault.

He denied the abuse, which was said to have been carried out in County Fermanagh between 1963 and 1973.

Fr Lewis has already successfully appealed three of the 11 counts he was found guilty of committing in November 2011 and last year the was freed after having his sentence reduced to two years and nine months on foot of this.

Last week senior judges in Belfast refused Fr Lewis’ application to go before the Supreme Court on the remaining counts.

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Heed the voice of the wounded child

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Moira Rayner | 14 November 2013

The findings of Victoria’s parliamentary inquiry into the sexual abuse of children in non-government institutions surprise nobody who has been listening. But they are listening to adults, not children. The truth is, we started to talk about emotional, physical and sexual maltreatment as children in the ’60s and ’70s, when the language and concepts of ‘abuse’ were developing through the research. The cone of silence started to lift a little. We know now why it did: there were just too many dirty secrets underneath.

And there were a lot more opportunities to talk about them — group and individual therapy, therapeutic and spiritual and ‘self-actualisation’ movements — and even newly accessible professional, medical, and free and empathetic legal services. As the wounded child within the damaged man or woman spoke, it was eventually realised that if it happened then, it could be happening now.

Unless we take children seriously as people, it will. Unless individuals within the culture of their institution see it as a duty to stick their necks out and challenge its culture, it will. Unless bishops and their helpers and archbishops and cardinals and religious supporting them in their spiritual work take personal responsibility for protecting vulnerable people ahead of protecting the reputation of their institution, it will happen again.

A report of misconduct by even a very powerful person within that institution should not lead to the expulsion of the messenger. It should bring into question the culture of the organisation, that such a report could surface decades after the reported misconduct. It could just happen again. I am acutely aware of the present day experience of Professor Patrick Parkinson, who was asked to advise one Catholic teaching order on its culture, and then withdrew, citing institutional obduracy and avoidance as making the completion of his task impossible.

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The Victorian Inquiry: sinful behaviour, or dangerous belief?

AUSTRALIA
The Conversation

Peter Sherlock
Vice-Chancellor at MCD University of Divinity

The report of the Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and Other Non-Government Organisations has now been tabled in the Victorian Parliament. Entitled Betrayal of Trust, it is sober reading. It deserves to be read by everyone involved in the leadership of religious organisations in Australia to ensure that the widespread abuses and systemic failures it documents are never allowed to occur again.

If acted upon, its recommendations will see the most fundamental overhaul of the way the churches are governed in Victoria’s history. This is because the inquiry has taken seriously the complex structures and histories of religious institutions in governance, law, and authority.

The report recognises that churches should be free to determine their own beliefs and behaviours in purely religious matters. It also recognises that it is hard to define the limits of what is and what is not a religious matter.

At issue is not the separation of church and state. Rather, the question is the extent to which the state ought to regulate the churches in matters such as freedom of conscience, or freedom to discriminate.

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Comments From Victims And Activists (Or: My Lawyer Can Beat Your Lawyer)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Victorian State Parliamentary enquiry into child sexual abuse by clergy has presented its report, which contains 15 principal recommendations for the Victorian Government (see yesterday’s posting). Laws covering these recommendations are expected to be passed by the Parliament early next year.

While the bulk of the report reinforces the pre-existing perception that abuse was widespread, covered up and that victims were poorly treated, the focus for it has been the legislative changes required to do something about the problems. Any new laws will have to be carefully crafted to avoid loop-holes which the churches’ lawyers could exploit. It is probably, therefore, worthwhile, to commence an analysis of responses by stakeholders with members of the legal profession who are associated with the victims.

Melbourne lawyer, Angela Sdrinis, who acts on behalf of victims, said the legislative reforms and removal of the statute of limitations were very important. “Most historical abuse claimants face that defence that their claim is out of time,” she said. “The recommendations regarding ensuring that church entities can be sued in these cases of historical abuse is very important, but the recommendations regarding an alternative justice model are also very important.”

Ms Sdrinis said very few of the hundreds, if not thousands, of claims made against the Catholic Church had succeeded because of two “almost impregnable” legal defences. “The two important things for me as a lawyer representing people are the legislative reform and the abolition of the statute of limitations is obviously very important,” she said. Further, she hopes the government will act quickly to take on the recommendations, and not wait for the outcome of the federal royal commission into child sexual abuse

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Family of late man who accused priest of abuse sues Archdiocese

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

MENSAH M. DEAN, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
DEANM@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-568-8278
POSTED: Thursday, November 14, 2013

THE FAMILY of the man who died of a drug overdose last month just before testifying in court against the Catholic priest he accused of sexually molesting him filed a wrongful-death lawsuit yesterday against the priest and the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

The civil suit filed in Common Pleas Court by the family of Sean Patrick McIlmail alleges that the church failed to remove Father Robert L. Brennan from having contact with children even after officials learned he had behaved inappropriately with numerous boys.

McIlmail, 26, died of a drug overdose Oct. 13, which led to the abrupt cancellation of a preliminary hearing for Brennan, 75. Criminal charges against him are expected to be formally dropped at a court hearing today.

“Sean appeared good on the outside, but on the inside, he didn’t believe in himself,” Sean’s mother, Deborah, said at a news conference yesterday. “The unspeakable, disgusting horrors that had happened to Sean by Father Robert L. Brennan would haunt Sean forever.”

The Archdiocese had no comment on the lawsuit, a spokeswoman said.

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Overdose victim’s family sues archdiocese for wrongful death

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LAST UPDATED: Thursday, November 14, 2013

A month ago, Deborah McIlmail learned that her troubled 26-year-old son, Sean, had died of an accidental drug overdose.

On Wednesday, McIlmail took an unusual first step to memorialize her son’s passing – by filing a wrongful-death lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, contending that church officials ignored years of complaints against the Rev. Robert L. Brennan while he molested Sean and more than 20 other boys.

“This is his [Sean’s] legacy,” McIlmail, 57, told reporters at a Center City news conference. “Sean will empower sexual-abuse victims who live in darkness and shame, and consequently bring about the necessary changes for the Catholic Church.”

The suit, filed in Common Pleas Court, also names Brennan and Msgr. William J. Lynn, the former church official responsible for investigating allegations of misconduct by priests.

Lynn, 62, is the former secretary for clergy who was convicted of child endangerment last year and is serving three to six years in prison. According to trial testimony, Lynn took part in transferring Brennan from parish to parish while he repeatedly molested preteen boys.

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Child Advocates Concerned by St. Paul Police Announcement on Church Abuse Investigation

MINNESOTA
KSTP

[with video]

By: Nick Winkler

St. Paul police announced Wednesday their investigation into the St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese is not focused on church leaders right now.

Archbishop John Nienstedt has been criticized for how he has handled priest sex abuse allegations.

The announcement regarding Nienstedt has some child advocates concerned it could impact an abuse victim’s decision on whether to come forward.

Some are calling on law enforcement to become more aggressive in regard to investigating the archdiocese.

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A litany of abuse and betrayal

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Editorial

ENDEMIC criminality and cover-ups warrant strong responses. To that end, the recommendations of the Victorian inquiry into child sex abuse by religious and other organisations should be considered on a national basis by the royal commission into child abuse and by political leaders. The recommendations include lifting the statute of limitations to assist victims, making it an offence to conceal abuse, a statutory body to monitor and audit compliance on child protection requirements, and an independent body to handle victims’ claims.

After years of frustration, the Victorian inquiry provided victims with much-needed comfort by hearing and understanding their painful experiences at the hands of clerics and others in positions of trust, especially in the Catholic and Anglican churches and Salvation Army. As one victim said: “Any abuse is dreadful … but when it happens within the context of the Christian community, it damages your soul … it attacks your meaning of life.”

The behaviour of past church leaders was unconscionable. In 1993, for example, former archbishop Frank Little wrote a letter lauding the services of retired priest Desmond Gannon, when he knew the priest had admitted abusing five or six boys. The worst damage occurred in the decades up to the 1980s, when church responses were condemned as “seriously inadequate and sometimes non-existent”. It was for that reason, Cardinal George Pell told the inquiry, he established the Melbourne Response in 1996. It was overseen by independent QC Peter O’Callaghan, an appointment welcomed by police. The inquiry was also scathing about the failure of church leaders in not reporting abuse to police. At that time, however, many victims refused to go to the police.

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John Paul II the Holy Father of Lies! Cardinal Dziwisz book: “JPII knew nothing” about bestial pedophile priest Fr. Maciel is Vatican Titanic Deceits

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

The main reason why John Paul II must be canonized a saint soon as possible is because all priests are now forced to become Vatican robots: they must cite John Paul II in every homily especially in all Sunday homilies – so that every time they quote the evangelists or the Epistles, they must give only the “official Vatican interpretation” which is — “What ‘saint’ John Paul II wrote”. So in all Vatican Catholic churches today, everything the priests say must be “The Epistle and Gospel (interpretation) according to ‘Saint’ John Paul II” only. Behold the new JP2 Matrix Clones a.k.a. Vatican Catholic Priests Robots! It’s not Roman Catholic Church anymore, see why below. Vatican robots have no hearts akin to Theology and John Paul II are heartless and together they made pedophile priest Fr. Marcial Maciel thrive

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Former Menifee Mormon Bishop Pleads Guilty to Sex Crimes

CALIFORNIA
Menifee 24

by Kristen Spoon @ 11/13/2013

A former Mormon bishop serving in Menifee pleaded guilty today to two felony sex crimes involving teenage girls who attended his church. He will serve three years in prison.

Todd M. Edwards, 49, entered the guilty pleas as part of an agreement. The first count, sexual penetration with a foreign object with force and against the victim’s will, is a felony and strike. The second count, sexual battery, also is a felony.

Judge Becky L. Dugan said the first count carries with it a strike because of the severity of the crime. Edwards remains free on $65,000 cash bail until he returns to court on Dec. 11 to be remanded into custody. If he doesn’t appear on that date, a bench warrant will be served, the agreement will be null and void, and Edwards could serve nine years per count.

Edwards declined comment. He must register as a sex offender for life.

Edwards, who currently resides in Nevada, was released as bishop of the Menifee Ward after church officials learned of the investigation in 2012. He was arrested at his Murrieta residence May 28, 2013 following an investigation into allegations of sexual crimes in November 2006 and February 2012.

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MENIFEE: Ex-Mormon bishop admits sex crimes with teen church members

CALIFORNIA
The Press-Enterprise

BY SARAH BURGE STAFF WRITER November 13, 201

A former Mormon bishop pleaded guilty Wednesday, Nov. 13, to two felony sex crimes involving teen girls who attended his Menifee church.

Todd M. Edwards, 49, who has been free since August on $65,000 bond, pleaded guilty to sexual battery and sexual penetration with a foreign object. The pleas were entered as part of an agreement with prosecutors.

Under the plea deal, Edwards would receive three years in prison and be ordered to register for life as a sex offender at his sentencing, scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 11.

He also is charged with dissuading one of the victims from reporting a crime, but that charge is expected to be dismissed.

“I think it was a wise resolution,” defense attorney Sean Davitt said after the hearing.

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Secret Tape In Lebovits And Kellner Trials Allegedly “Goes Missing” From D.A.’s Office

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

A secretly recorded tape of alleged hasidic serial pedophile Rabbi Baruch Lebovits making incriminating statements to one of his victims appears to have “gone missing” from the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office just as Lebovits is allegedly about to get a sweetheart plea deal from Brooklyn’s outgoing D.A. Charles J. Hynes, Hella Winston reported in The Jewish Week.

Last week, the prosecutors on the case against Samuel Kellner, the father of an alleged Lebovits victim who was accused by the D.A. of extorting Lebovits’ family, wanted to dismiss the case against Kellner due to lack of evidence.

The D.A.’s Rackets Bureau Chief Michael Vecchione expelled them from his bureau and, with help of D.A. Charles J. Hynes, demoted them.

Still, the evidence against Kellner has crumbled, with most of the key parts shown to be based on what appears to be perjured and illegally induced testimony and on a blatant mistranslation of a secret Yiddish language tape make by a member of the Lebovits family that purportedly recorded Kellner extorting the family.

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Crackdown on Child Sex Abuse Unravels

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

By Paul Berger
Published October 31, 2011, issue of November 04, 2011.

One of the most high-profile convictions of an ultra-Orthodox rabbi for sexual abuse in recent times may be in danger of reversal, according to new disclosures in court records obtained by the Forward.
When Baruch Lebovits was sentenced last year to up to 32 years in jail, victims’ rights advocates hailed it as a turning point in the battle against sexual abuse in the insular Orthodox community.

“From now on,” Joseph Diangello, an abuse victim turned advocate, told The Jewish Star at the time, “victims of sexual abuse in the Hasidic community that have no voice with the people that are supposed to protect them will have a voice in the court of law.”

There was a sense that the wall of silence that had protected abusers in the ultra-Orthodox community for so long was finally crumbling.

But Lebovits’s 2010 conviction is now unraveling amid allegations of perjury, conspiracy and extortion.

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Hear Sam Kellner — In His Own Words

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

[with audio]

By Paul Berger

For this week’s story about the cases of accused molester Baruch Lebovits and accused extortionist Sam Kellner, the Forward was provided with a trove of secretly-recorded conversations.

Among the recordings is a conversation Sam Kellner had with the family of a man who had already pled guilty to abuse charges.

Over the course of 80 minutes, Kellner counsels the family that the man could avoid jail by getting ultra-Orthodox rabbis to pressure Brooklyn district attorney Charles Hynes and by bribing prosecutors. (A spokesman for the DA’s office said assertions of possible wrongdoing are “ludicrous.”)

The Forward made a commitment to protect the identity of the family involved, therefore we have provided two excerpts from the recording. Passages where people other than Kellner talk have been bleeped out.

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Sam Kellner’s Tangled Hasidic Tale of Child Sex Abuse, Extortion and Faith

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

By Paul Berger
Published November 14, 2013

This is a story about religion, sex abuse, power, extortion, bungled prosecutions and the pitfalls of pursuing justice in an insular Orthodox community where disputes are solved internally and mistrust of outsiders reigns.

It involves a convicted sex offender; a Hasidic multimillionaire oil and diamond dealer; a drug addict; a New York assemblyman; a supporting cast of ultra-Orthodox rabbis, private investigators, victims’ advocates, bloggers and lawyers — including Alan Dershowitz — and a cache of secretly taped conversations.

The story plays out against the backdrop of a bitter 2013 election battle for the post of Brooklyn district attorney in which claims of corruption, connivance and race-baiting abounded.
But it began for me in 2010, in a courtroom in Brooklyn, where Baruch Lebovits, a Boro Park cantor recently convicted on eight counts of child sexual abuse, appeared for sentencing.

On one side of the courtroom sat a phalanx of Lebovits’s black-clad supporters in neat rows. As one of Lebovits’s daughters entered the courtroom, she turned to the mass of advocates occupying the benches opposite and, fixing her red, raw eyes on them, insisted, “My father is innocent.”

The advocates, many themselves victims of other ultra-Orthodox child molesters, were in court that day to show support for the victim and to see if justice would finally be served.

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Tape Seen As Incriminating In Kellner Case Disappears

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

11/13/13
Hella Winston
Jewish Week Correspondent

A secretly recorded tape of an alleged serial pedophile making incriminating statements to one of his victims has apparently “gone missing” from the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office.

That bombshell revelation came from chasidic abuse whistleblower Sam Kellner’s lawyers in court Tuesday morning, when the Brooklyn district attorney asked for and received an adjournment of Kellner’s case until the first week in January, when DA-elect Ken Thompson takes office.

Last week, the prosecutors on the Kellner case had recommended it be dismissed today for lack of evidence, but, in a development that shocked seasoned lawyers, were overruled and then tossed out of their bureau by their controversial boss, Michael Vecchione. While Jerry Schmetterer, the spokesman for Brooklyn DA Charles Hynes, told the New York Post on Monday that Vecchione “believes there is a case” against Kellner, the assistant district attorney who appeared in court to request the adjournment, John Holmes, made it he clear he was merely the messenger and had no information about the case; he said the case has yet to be reassigned.

Kellner’s lawyers, who lambasted the DA’s office for “playing games” with the court, told the judge they were ready to go to trial. They also requested discovery materials to which they are entitled, including the tape of a conversation between accused child molester Baruch Lebovits and one of his alleged victims. (Lebovits was convicted of child sexual abuse in 2010 but got his conviction reversed because of a prosecution violation. The district attorney has vowed to retry him and his next court date is Nov. 19, though sources have told The Jewish Week that he is likely to get a plea deal with little or no jail time).

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Stephen Budd case update…

FLORIDA
WPTV

By: Brian Entin
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – The topic of a plea deal came up at Stephen Budd’s court hearing on Wednesday.

Budd is the former Rosarian Academy teacher accused of sexually assaulting two young girls and also, according to police, having dozens of child porn images on his computer.

His defense attorney says he is not part of plea deal discussions and they are just happening within the state attorney’s office.

“We are not at that point. We’re still in the discovery phase. If the state makes an offer, obviously we’ll talk about what the offer is in light of all the facts. But we’re not seeking a plea at this point. We’re preparing for trial,” Budd’s attorney Jason Weiss said.

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More Vic Jewish home abuse claims likely

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

BY CHARISSE EDE AAP NOVEMBER 14, 2013 2:37PM

MORE victims are expected to come forward with allegations of abuse at children’s homes run by Victorian Jewish welfare organisations in the 1960s.

Jewish Care Victoria has set up an independent support scheme to investigate claims by three people that they were abused in residential care run by previous Jewish organisations.

Manny Waks, the founder of Jewish victims’ support group Tzedek, believes more victims are likely to come forward following the allegations.

“At this stage, it has come to my attention that there is at least one other alleged victim in this case,” he told AAP.

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JCCV appreciates opportunity to provide input into sexual abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
J-Wire

November 14, 2013 by  

Nina Bassat, President of the Jewish Community Council of Victoria (JCCV), has welcomed the tabling of the Report of the Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse by Religious and other Non-Government Organisations.

She said: “I commend the Victorian Government on holding the Inquiry into the Handling of Child Abuse and thank the Committee Chair, Ms Georgie Crozier, MP and the rest of the Committee for providing an opportunity for the Jewish Community Council of Victoria (JCCV) to give evidence.

The conduct of the Inquiry was exemplary; it was rigorous and at the same time sympathetic and thoughtful.

The process has been enormously valuable in allowing a large number of people to tell their story and for many of them, thus enabling the healing process to start.

The JCCV supports the Report’s recommendations in relation to reporting of serious indictable offences and those relating to child endangerment and to grooming and I look forward to reading the Report in greater depth.

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Inquiry findings tipped to bring out more child abuse survivors

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The abuse survivor group Broken Rites says it is expecting more victims of childhood abuse to come forward as a result of parliamentary inquiry findings.

The final report by the Victorian inquiry into child abuse at religious and other organisations was handed down in State Parliament yesterday.

It suggested a range of legal changes to better protect children, including making concealing child abuse a criminal offence.

A spokesman for Broken Rites, Dr Bernard Barrett, says historical cases of abuse in western Victoria have played a significant role in bringing the issue to the national agenda.

“The parliamentary report, especially the parts that emphasise western Victoria, will grab attention throughout Australia, so I think you’ll find that other victims of these crimes elsewhere in Australia will contact the state police,” he said.

“I think it will be a big topic in the future.”

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The Holy See to fight graft

VATICAN CITY
The Voice of Russia

An ad-hock investigation commission is due to report to Pope Francis I later this month on its probe into financial irregularities at the Vatican Bank. The Pontiff decided to put an end to fraud at the Institute for the Works of Religion, which is the official name of the Roman Curia’s financial centre, right on his election in spring this year. The decision was prompted by advice from Italy’s Finance Guard, which has been conducting its own probe into the Vatican Bank fraud since early this year. The investigation caused “voluntary resignations” in summer of the Vatican Bank Director Paolo Cipriani, Deputy Director Massimo Tulli, as well as about a dozen of lower-rank officials.

The Vicar of Christ said during his Sunday Mass that it would be good to “tie corrupt officials to a rock and throw them in the sea”, which is a quote from St. Luke the Evangelist. It is the first time that the Pontiff has made such a peremptory statement, which is evidence of his irritation at the fact that corruption and profit have taken root in the Catholic Church, and is also an admission that graft has reached epidemic proportions that call for interventions and drastic moves by secular and clerical authorities.

Alas, it is human to be greedy, and man gives in to temptation, that is why Pope Francis called attention to that deadly sin, the general director of the Russian Political Information Centre, Alexei Mukhin, has told the Voice of Russia. Experience has shown that neither the super-hard measures, like shooting bribe-takers in China, nor attempted persuasion have proved helpful in extirpating that ugly phenomenon, he added.

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26 Perlitz victims file lawsuits against Fairfield

CONNECTICUT
The Mirror

Twenty-one new lawsuits filed last Thursday allege that Fairfield University and others failed to supervise Douglas Perlitz ‘92, who was sentenced to nearly 20 years in prison for sexually abusing boys at a school he founded in Haiti.

These new cases bring the total of lawsuits against Fairfield and others to 26, said the victims’ attorney, Mitchell Garabedian. The lawsuits demand $20 million for each victim.

The plaintiffs of the new lawsuits are ages 18 through 27, and they were abused from 2000 to 2008 at ages 10 to 20, according to Garabedian. Some were abused by Perlitz repeatedly, he added.

Garabedian is also investigating 30 other victims.

In addition to Fairfield, other defendants include Society of Jesus of New England and Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta.

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Priest tells of his ‘shock’ at arrest

UNITED KINGDOM
Lancashire Evening Post

A senior priest has told a court of the moment he was arrested by police probing allegations of sexual assault made against him.

Stephen Shield, 53, was due to officiate at a funeral service two hours after his arrest.

He denies three counts of indecent assault against a man – who had dreams of joining the priesthood – more than two decades ago.

Shield trained in Rome and spent some time at English Martyrs Church in Garstang Road, Preston, where two of the offences were alleged to have taken place.

Dressed in a blue jumper and shirt, he took to the witness stand at Preston Crown Court to be cross examined at his trial.

He said: “I was supposed to conduct a funeral at 9.30am that morning. I was lying in bed going through the last few words of the service in my head. “I was concerned about the family that I knew very well having another priest.”

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Prison push for child sex abuse…

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

[with video]

Prison push for child sex abuse lies follows Victorian Parliamentary inquiry into institutional failures

MATT JOHNSTON, JAMES CAMPBELL HERALD SUN NOVEMBER 13, 2013

NEW laws to jail fiends who groom children to molest, and church leaders who cover it up, will be introduced next year.

The reforms follow Wednesday’s tabling in State Parliament of a historic report on child abuse, which revealed police were investigating 135 new cases.

Tears flowed as victims stood in the rain to lend their voices in support of the report.

The report slammed leaders of churches and non-government organisations that failed vulnerable children during decades of “betrayal beyond comprehension”.

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Tony Abbott defends George Pell after criticism from child abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Katharine Murphy deputy political editor
theguardian.com, Wednesday 13 November 2013

The prime minister has gone in to bat for his friend, the leader of the Catholic church in Australia, George Pell, a man who was “not perfect” but was nonetheless “a fine human being, a great churchman”.

Tony Abbott was asked to comment on a report that followed an inquiry in Victoria, which was highly critical of Pell, his attitudes to the problems evidenced in comments before the inquiry and the institutional failures of the Catholic church in stopping child abuse.

The report, tabled on Wednesday in the Victorian parliament, recommended a broad range of actions to strengthen protections for victims, as well as additional child protection measures.

The prime minister is close to Pell. Abbott said on Thursday his understanding was that Pell was the first “senior cleric who took this issue seriously”.

“Is he perfect? No,” Abbott told 3AW on Thursday morning . “He is in my judgment a fine human being, a great churchman.

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Scathing report service to church: priest

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A report that savages the Catholic Church’s response to child sex abuse is doing the institution a “great service”, a priest says.

Father Kevin Dillon said the Victorian parliamentary inquiry’s findings on institutional responses to child sex abuse is the wake-up call the church needed.

“Things have been so out of alignment in terms of what the church’s position has been,” Fr Dillon told AAP on Thursday.

“It’s taken something as far-reaching and honest as this to tell the church from the perspective of the people of Victoria that `you have done great damage, you are responsible for it and you are obliged to fix it as much as that’s possibly able to be accomplished’.”

The report is scathing of the church’s leadership before the 1990s, saying child abuse was trivialised and their protection of pedophiles meant abuse happened when it could have been avoided.

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Catholic church welcomes child abuse report but defends its patch

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

David Marr
theguardian.com, Wednesday 13 November 2013

The Catholic church will not go quietly. True, the archbishops of both Melbourne and Sydney have welcomed the Victorian report into clerical sex abuse. But they signalled at the same time that despite everything the church is still fighting to defend its patch.

Tears and ovations greeted the tabling of the report in the Legislative Council on Wednesday. “The words from the politicians just rang in my heart,” Chrissie Foster told Guardian Australia. “There they were saying what I’d wanted to say for so long and they have the power to change things. It was astounding.”

The Fosters’ two daughters were raped by their parish priest. One killed herself. The other is now permanently disabled. The implacable dignity and determination of the Fosters is one reason we were all in the council chamber on Wednesday morning: victims, advocates and journalists in the galleries above. Politicians below.

“We need to have the government behind us,” said Foster, “because we have been at the mercy of another power, the Catholic church which has been heartless and relentless. Suddenly there is another power that is fighting for us. It was wonderful.”

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Vic report into abuse ‘dream come true’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A Victorian parliamentary report recommending the Catholic Church be immediately made liable for child sex abuse has been welcomed as a “dream come true” by a victims group.

Nicky Davis of the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests (SNAP) said she never thought the issue would be taken seriously or that anything meaningful would be done.

“We’re thrilled,” she told AAP on Thursday.

“They’ve got to the bottom of the issue and they haven’t held back from taking on what needs to be done.”

She described the 15 major recommendations made in the report as “comprehensive”, “innovative” and “groundbreaking”.

Aside from compensating victims and making those who had long avoided responsibility accountable, implementing laws and standards suggested by the committee would encourage more people to report abuse, Ms Davis said.

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EDITORIAL: Exposing church excuses

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

FOR decades, allegations of sexual abuse by clergy in Australia were handled in a piecemeal way.

Churches and institutions involved seemed able to deflect criticism, and law enforcers and politicians appeared to struggle with the issues.

Victims and their advocates were told matters were being fixed ‘‘in house’’, but somehow they weren’t.

At times it seemed as if some institutions were waging a war of attrition against their accusers, hunkered behind ancient practices that they believed entitled them to hide dreadful crimes.

Some shifted paedophiles from place to place, ducking and weaving and berating from the pulpit any who dared call their bluff.

And then, suddenly, the dam broke. The defences of church administrators fell away, exposed as the shams they always were.

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Child Sex Abuse Victim Who Fights Against Sex Abuse Coverups…

AUSTRALIA
Failed Messiah

Child Sex Abuse Victim Who Fights Against Sex Abuse Coverups Speaks At National Rally Against Abuse

“On behalf of many victims and survivors of child sexual abuse within Jewish institutions, I would like to acknowledge and thank the Victorian Government for launching this Inquiry. With today’s publication of the Inquiry’s report, we can of course celebrate a milestone in a long journey but we should also reflect on the significant work that still lies ahead.…”

Speech at Rally of Hope
Victorian Parliament House
Wednesday 13 November 2013
Tzedek Founder & CEO Manny Waks

Thank you to In Good Faith and Associates for initiating this rally, and for the opportunity to address you all here today.

On behalf of many victims and survivors of child sexual abuse within Jewish institutions, I would like to acknowledge and thank the Victorian Government for launching this Inquiry. With today’s publication of the Inquiry’s report, we can of course celebrate a milestone in a long journey but we should also reflect on the significant work that still lies ahead.

This Inquiry was the catalyst for the establishment of Tzedek (“Justice” in Hebrew), the only organisation within the Australian Jewish community that is dedicated to the issue of child sexual abuse.

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Salavation Army in Australia ”ashamed” and ”sorry” for past brutal abuse of children

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 14, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

The Salvation Army says it is ashamed and deeply sorry for the brutal abuse suffered by many children in its care, following the release of an eagerly awaited report on clergy child sex abuse.
The report, launched in the Victorian Parliament on Wednesday, also recommends sweeping changes to laws behind which the Catholic Church has sheltered, and accuses its leaders of trivialising the problem as a ”short-term embarrassment”.

Inquiry chairwoman Georgie Crozier spoke of ”a betrayal beyond comprehension” and children suffering ”unimaginable harm”. She said the inquiry had referred 135 previously unreported claims of child sex abuse to the police.

The report, Betrayal of Trust, wants to establish a new crime when people in authority knowingly put a child a risk. It wants to make it a crime to leave a child at risk or not report abuse, including for clergy, but does not recommend ending the exemption for the confessional. Grooming a child or parents should be a crime, child abuse should be excluded from the statute of limitations, and the present church systems of dealing with victims in-house should be replaced by an independent authority funded by the churches, the report says.

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Vindication for victims as report into child sex abuse hailed

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

By PETER COLLINS and CLARE QUIRK Nov. 14, 2013

A HISTORIC Victorian parliamentary report on a child sex abuse inquiry has been welcomed across the south-west, where dozens of victims still live with their trauma.

The Betrayal of Trust report released yesterday makes 15 key recommendations to prevent a reoccurrence of the widespread abuses over several decades within the Catholic Church and other religious and secular organisations.

Warrnambool detective Colin Ryan, who was involved in investigating three Catholic clergy, described the report as a “very positive step”.

“I would think it would give a lot of victims a lot of comfort,” he told The Standard.

“The damage that is done by these sexual predators cannot be overstated.”

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Surge in child abuse reports

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Angela Pownall, The West Australian
November 14, 2013

A national public inquiry will return to Perth for the seventh time next month to hear about child sex abuse in Australian institutions as demand from abuse victims to tell their stories snowballs.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse held private hearings in Perth last week and plans to return early next year.

Justice Paul McClellan, commission chairman, has revealed the massive scale of the abuse allegations being reported to the inquiry a year after it was set up by the Federal Government.

It comes as Victoria’s child abuse parliamentary inquiry, which has heard from 450 victims, tabled its report yesterday and called for legal changes, including making it a crime to conceal or fail to report child abuse offences.

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Catholic Church backs sex abuse compensation scheme

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 14, 2013

Jane Lee
Legal Affairs Reporter for The Age

The Catholic Church says it wants to fund an unlimited national compensation scheme for child sexual abuse victims.

The church’s Truth, Justice and Healing Council – a national mouthpiece established after the royal commission was announced – issued a statement on Thursday, saying that it would ask the attorneys-general of the federal, state and territory governments to begin working on the scheme.

The move comes a day after a state committee tabled its Betrayal of Trust report, the result of an 18-month inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious and other organisations.

Georgie Crozier, the chairwoman of the inquiry’s committee, delivered the report to parliament with a slew of stinging rebukes of the Catholic Church’s leaders, whom she accused of trivialising the problem of child abuse as a “short-term embarrassment”.

The report recommended an independent redress scheme run by the government but paid for by non-government organisations, to replace the Catholic Church’s internal systems for dealing with victims – called Melbourne Response and its national equivalent Towards Healing – which victims criticised throughout the inquiry as lacking transparency.

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Govt to act quickly on abuse report

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The Victorian government says it will not wait to act on a child sex abuse report that is scathing of the Catholic Church and recommends widespread legislative reform.

The government has six months to consider the recommendations of the inquiry into child sex abuse which include a call for concealing child abuse offences to be made a crime.

But Premier Denis Napthine said the government would introduce changes to the law in parliament early next year.

‘The government will not wait to act on this report,’ Dr Napthine said.

‘Criminal abuse of children represents a departure of the gravest kind from the standards of decency fundamental to any civilised society.’

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Pell first to act on abuse: Abbott

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

AAP

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott says Cardinal George Pell does bear some responsibility for the errors of the Catholic Church, but in the same breath defended the senior Catholic’s response to child sex abuse.

A landmark Victorian report savaged the church’s handling of abuse allegations and said Cardinal Pell had shown a reluctance to acknowledge and accept responsibility for its institutional failures.

Mr Abbott, who has not read the report, said the Catholic Church was not the only institution that didn’t handle the issue well and Cardinal Pell had been the first senior cleric to act on allegations.

“I understand that these things probably did happen but I suspect it wasn’t just the church that didn’t handle these things well,” Mr Abbott told Fairfax Radio.

He said Cardinal Pell was not perfect but he was a “fine human being” and a “great churchman”.

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THE ROYAL COMMISSION INTO CHILD ABUSE CONTINUES; CATHOLIC CHURCH IMPLICATED

AUSTRALIA
Pedestrian TV

November 14, 2013

After years of pressure to investigate child abuse, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is finally underway; thus begins the long process of healing for many victims. The Commissioners have been appointed for three years with their goal being to “expose the response of the institution in which the abuse occurred and identify the lessons which can be learned from that response in an endeavour to ensure that abuse does not happen again in any institution” as told by the Chair of the Commission, the Hon. Justice Peter McClellan, in his opening address.

Two days ago the Victorian Parliament released an inquiry, into the handling of child abuse by religious and other organisations, entitled ‘Betrayal of Trust’. The inquiry’s key recommendations include:

. MANDATORY reporting of child sex abuse;
. EXCLUDING organisations such as the Catholic Church from any civil action statute of limitations;
. HAVING alternative avenues of justice for individuals who don’t wish to take legal action;
. GREATER monitoring of organisations and enhancement of prevention systems.

The inquiry states that government groups, including the Salvation Army and the Catholic Church, have previously failed to adequately deal with systematic child abuse and that it was “beyond dispute that some trusted organisations made a deliberate choice not to follow processes for reporting and responding to allegations of criminal child abuse”. It went on to say that “There has been been a substantial body of credible evidence presented to the inquiry and ultimately concessions made by senior representatives of religious bodies, including the Catholic Church, that they had taken steps with the direct objective of concealing wrongdoing.”

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‘Complicated but possible’ to amend legal standing of Catholic Church

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Lawyers are today strongly backing one of the key recommendations of the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child abuse cases that laws be changed to allow victims to sue the Catholic Church. The recommendation says religious institutions which receive government funding or tax exemptions must be required to be incorporated. The recommendation is expected to be challenged by the Church.

Transcript

ELEANOR HALL: Lawyers and survivors of child abuse are today strongly backing one of the key recommendations of the Victorian Report into Child Sexual Abuse, that laws be changed to allow the Catholic Church to be sued.

The recommendation says religious institutions which receive government funding or tax exemptions, should be required to be incorporated.

It’s a powerful recommendation and one which many expect the Catholic Church to fight.

In Melbourne, Alison Caldwell reports.

ALISON CALDWELL: In its report to Parliament, the Victorian Committee strongly condemns the legal standing of the Catholic Church, upheld by politicians for decades.

EXCERPT FROM REPORT (voiceover): There is no doubt that the unincorporated structure of the Catholic Church has not only prevented victims of criminal child abuse from bringing legal claims against the Catholic Church as an entity. It has also been exploited by the Catholic Church to avoid financial liability.

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Family anger over sex abuse sentence

NEW ZEALAND
NZ City

The family of one of the victims of a Kaitaia business leader who sexually abused boys say his jail sentence is a “joke”.

Former senior member of the Mormon Church Daniel Taylor, 35, was sentenced to five years and seven months’ jail for nine counts of sexual offences against boys aged between 11 and 16 that he pleaded guilty to in September.

A number of the charges were representative.

In the High Court at Whangarei on Thursday, Justice Peter Woodhouse imposed a minimum non-parole period of two years and 10 months on Roberts.

It provoked disappointment from victims and their families.

Charles Hohaia, Te Waka Whaanui director and a counsellor, says families of the victims he talked to were disappointed by the sentence given that victims would need to live with what had happened to them for the rest of their lives.

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Tony Abbott defends Cardinal Pell’s role in church handling of abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 14, 2013

Dan Harrison, Jane Lee

Prime Minister Tony Abbott has defended Cardinal George Pell’s role in the Catholic Church’s handling of child sex abuse cases, saying he deserved credit for being the first senior churchman to act.

Interviewed on Fairfax radio on Thursday following the release of a Victorian parliamentary report into institutional sex abuse, Mr Abbott said the church hadn’t handled the issue well, but defended Cardinal Pell.

“The only thing I’d say … is that my understanding is that the first senior cleric who took this issue very seriously was in fact Cardinal Pell,” he said.

Mr Abbott said it was well known that he had a lot of time for Cardinal Pell.

“Does that mean that he is perfect? No. Does that mean that he doesn’t bear some responsibility for the errors of the church? Of course not,” he said.

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Sex abuse caregiver handed ‘joke’ sentence – parent

NEW ZEALAND
TVNZ

[with video]

A Far North caregiver who admitted sexually abusing young boys could be out of jail in less than three years.

Daniel Taylor, 34, has been sentenced to five years and seven months behind bars but will be eligible for parole in half that time.

Family members of the victims said the jail term is not long enough, with one describing the sentence as a joke.

Taylor was a caregiver for Child, Youth and Family. One of his victims told the court the offending against him made him question his sexuality, while another contemplated taking his own life.

A family spokesperson said the families are very disappointed because as a church leader and businessman Taylor was given a lot of trust and had a lot of power.

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Victims question church inaction

AUSTRALIA
7 News

MIKE HEDGE –
November 14, 2013

Every kid in the school knew what was going on, and many had scars to show for it.

But until this week the victims of men like the Christian Brothers Robert Best and Edward Dowlan struggled with the thought that no one really believed them.

Thanks to the Victorian parliamentary committee that conducted Australia’s most far-reaching investigation into child sexual abuse in religious organisations, men like “Stephen”, who is now in his 40s, have a chance.

Stephen went to school at St Patricks in Ballarat, a town where there once lived some of the most despicable men this country has known.

Best and Dowlan have been convicted and another pedophile Christian Brother, Gerald Fitzgerald, is dead, Father Paul Ryan has been jailed and there are others who can’t be named. All of them preyed viciously and habitually on children they had vowed to protect.

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Sex abuse victims urged to come forward

NEW ZEALAND
Newstalk ZB

By: Carla Penman, | Upper North Island News | Thursday November 14 2013 18:59

Northland police are calling for any further victims of sexual abuse to come forward, following today’s sentencing of Daniel Taylor at the High Court in Whangarei.

The former Child Youth and Family caregiver and church elder was sentenced to five years and seven months in jail for preying on boys.

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Brother backs call for church to be liable

AUSTRALIA
9 News

A leader of a Catholic order has backed a call to make the church a legal entity that can be sued.

Christian Brothers deputy province leader Brother Julian McDonald said the recommendations of Victoria’s parliamentary inquiry on child sex abuse were sound and constructive and he supported them all.

Among the major changes called for by the report are reforms that would enable churches to be sued and make them liable for priests and teachers who commit abuse.

Br McDonald, who gave evidence to the inquiry, said the recommendations were sound.

“I’d hope that parliament will accept them so that we can move forward,” Br McDonald said.

“There’s none that I would reject out of hand at all.”

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All states urged to act on Vic report

AUSTRALIA
Courier Mail

BY GENEVIEVE GANNON AAP NOVEMBER 14, 2013

ALL Australian states are being urged to change laws preventing the Catholic Church from being sued and to consider a compensation fund for victims of child sex abuse.

A peak legal group says every government should implement a Victorian inquiry’s recommended reforms to make the Catholic Church immediately liable for child sex abuse.

The church itself is leading a call for the establishment of a national compensation scheme, which it will partially fund.

The parliamentary report, tabled on Wednesday, made a number of recommendations, including a call to remove the barriers that prevent victims from suing the Catholic Church.

Australian Lawyers Alliance (ALA) spokesman Andrew Morrison said there had been enough delays.

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The Past’s Price

TUCSON (AZ)
Tucson Weekly

by Mari Herreras @tucsonazmari

When Dove of Peace Lutheran Church parishioners walked out of last Sunday’s service, they were greeted by two television news crews and a newspaper reporter asking about a woman from a California-based sex abuse survivors’ organization passing out flyers about their music minister when they arrived for church that morning.

On Thursday, Nov. 7, Joelle Casteix, volunteer western regional director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, sent out a press release that she and other SNAP volunteers would be outside the 665 W. Roller Coaster Road church holding signs and childhood photos, and handing out flyers to warn church members that their music minister Eric Holtan was convicted in 2000 of first-degree and third-degree criminal sexual conduct; and that they should demand his removal and talk to their kids.

Dove of Peace member Brad Schwab told the Tucson Weekly that it’s been 13 years since Holtan pled guilty and he only has two years left on his 15-year probation. Another church member Nancy Day chimed in that many in the congregation knew about Holtan’s past and it was understood that Holtan’s probation officer checked in with the church pastor regularly.

Day added that Holtan does not work with children in the church in his duties as music minister. “He directs the adult choir,” she said, addressing the terms of Holtan’s probation in which he is not allowed to have unsupervised contact with underage females.

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Abbott’s response to child sexual abuse by clergy angers victims

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 15, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s support for Cardinal George Pell over child sex abuse is inappropriate and factually wrong, victims say.

This new controversy came as the Speaker of the Victorian Parliament, Ken Smith, accused the former Melbourne vicar-general, Gerald Cudmore, of committing perjury in evidence he gave to a parliamentary inquiry in 1993. Mr Smith said highly placed Catholics stifled his inquiry’s report.
Mr Abbott told Fairfax Radio the former Catholic archbishop of Melbourne was the first senior cleric to take sexual abuse by clergy seriously.

Asked whether Cardinal Pell, now Archbishop of Sydney, carried any responsibility for the failures described by the report of the Victorian inquiry into the church’s handling of child sexual abuse, Mr Abbott said he hadn’t read it.

”As is pretty well known, I have a lot of time for George Pell … my understanding is that the first senior cleric who took this issue very seriously was in fact Cardinal Pell.”

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Teen testifies against pastor in sex case

OKLAHOMA
The Lawton Constitution

Written by Malinda Rust Thursday, 14 November 2013

A local pastor accused of taking minors from a former Department of Human Services contracted group home to perform sexual acts in front of them at his church was bound over for trial Wednesday.

Bobby Burrell, 28, appeared relaxed, even chewing gum, alongside his defense attorney, Jason Lowe, during his preliminary hearing Wednesday afternoon. Burrell was charged in August with one count of child sexual abuse following nearly a year of investigation into allegations of misconduct at the Sequoyah Group Home, 824 SE 2nd, and released on a $20,000 bond.

Burrell, who was employed as a counselor at the home, is accused of masturbating in front of teenage boys who were housed at the center after he escorted them to One More Soul Outreach Ministry, 1010 SW McKinley, under the guise of performing work at the church. Court documents allege that some staff members knew of the allegations but didn’t report them to authorities.

The incident for which Burrell is charged stems from one encounter with a 16-year-old that is alleged to have occurred in July 2012. The victim from the alleged incident testified Wednesday with outstanding poise, despite the defense’s attempts to attack the young man’s credibility.

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Archbishop apologises for Catholic Church’s handling of sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

Posted Wed 13 Nov 2013

The Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne Dennis Hart has apologised for the church’s treatment of child sexual abuse cases.

Transcript

EMMA ALBERICI, PRESENTER: The Archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart, joined me just a short time ago.

Archbishop Hart, thanks very much for being there for us.

DENIS HART, ARCHBISHOP OF MELBOURNE: Thank you, Emma.

EMMA ALBERICI: Now Premier Napthine today said the Catholic Church should hang its head in shame. Do you now accept that the level of abuse in your church is out of proportion with any other religious organisation in this country?

DENIS HART: I think today has been highly significant. We welcome the report and we are committed to facing the terrible truth that victims have suffered beyond all proportion and it is very high in the Catholic Church and that I find shameful and shocking.

EMMA ALBERICI: You said today that your church leaders had made terrible mistakes. Given the strong language in today’s report regarding Cardinal Pell’s role, what will you be recommending to the Vatican as far as a response goes?

DENIS HART: I believe that our response has to be considered in the light of the whole picture. Cardinal Pell introduced the Melbourne response, which was the first attempt to do something about sexual abuse and to care for victims. I took that over when I was Archbishop and I believe that it really made significant steps forward in addressing this awful blight. Now we come to a new stage and we do have to remember that Cardinal Pell has been part of that progress to this point of time. There’s now a new stage when we, the Church, and the community can really move forward together and to be sure that the awful suffering is being addressed, that care is being provided for victims, ease of redress and appropriate reporting mechanisms so that we will not have abuse again in Victoria.

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More people have reported priest sex abuse, St. Paul police say

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Richard Chin
rchin@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 11/13/2013 1

St. Paul police said Wednesday that some people have responded to a recent request for victims of sexual abuse by priests to report their experiences to police.

“We obviously have made calls for folks to come forward, for victims to come forward,” said police spokesman Howie Padilla. “Some folks have courageously, bravely come forward to help tell their stories. We’re looking into those.”

At a news conference Oct. 17, St. Paul police appealed to victims to contact them in the wake of the reopening of an investigation of a child pornography case involving a former Hugo cleric.

Earlier, on Oct. 8, police said they were again investigating allegations that the Rev. Jonathan Shelley possessed child pornography on a computer he owned in 2004. Shelley denied the allegation, and the case was closed Sept. 29 after discs turned over to police by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis contained only adult porn.

But a few days later, a Hugo parishioner, who later obtained Shelley’s computer, turned over files to police that he said he had copied from the device’s hard drive.

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November 13, 2013

‘I apologise again for failures’

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Canberra and Goulburn

14 November 2013

With the royal commission’s examination of the Catholic Church’s response to child sexual abuse imminent, Archbishop Denis Hart has welcomed the recommendations of a Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the issues.

Archbishop Hart, head of both the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and the Melbourne Archdiocese, said it was hoped the inquiry and its recommendations “will assist the healing of those who have been abused”.

He said the recommendations covered five important areas: changes to the criminal law; easier access to the civil justice system; an independent, alternative avenue for justice; greater independent monitoring and scrutiny of organisations; and further improvements to prevention systems and processes.

“The committee’s report is rightly called Betrayal of Trust. I have spoken before about this betrayal and the irreparable damage it has caused. It is the worst betrayal of trust in my lifetime in the Catholic Church,” Archbishop Hart said.

“As the inquiry heard, we were far too slow to address the abuse, or even to accept that it was taking place. I fully acknowledge that leaders in the Church made terrible mistakes. These are indefensible. We know that the long-term suffering of victims and their families continues.

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Police sift through new evidence of alleged sex abuse by Catholic priests

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Laura Yuen, Minnesota Public Radio
November 13, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Police investigators are sifting through new evidence coming from people who say they were sexually abused by Catholic priests.

St. Paul Police spokesman Howie Padilla said since the department issued a call for victims to come forward four weeks ago, several people have responded.

“Some folks have courageously, bravely come forward to tell their stories,” Padilla said. “We’re looking into those.”

Police urged the public to contact investigators after they re-opened their investigation into the Rev. Jonathan Shelley and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. The call for help came after MPR News reported that the archdiocese discovered pornography on Shelley’s computer in 2004 — images that the archdiocese’s internal investigation concluded were “borderline illegal.”

Police wouldn’t say how many people came forward to report abuse.

But Padilla said the victim accounts are providing new evidence for investigators.

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Family Sues Archdiocese In Sex Abuse Scandal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
My Fox Philly

CENTER CITY –
The family of an alleged sexual abuse survivor is filing suit against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Sean McIlmail’s family filed charges against father Robert Brennan last September, but prosecutors dropped them after McIlmail died of a drug overdose in October.

The family claims the Archdiocese knew of the numerous sex abuse allegations against Brennan and is demanding justice for Sean.

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Finger-waggers and life lessons, Tucson style.

TUCSON (AZ)
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on November 13, 2013

I could tell exactly what kind of person she was when she started wagging her finger at me. She was mean.

I hate finger-waggers. My dearly departed cat had the perfect reaction: If I ever wagged a finger at him, he’d attack (playfully, of course. But it was still an attack). Even my sister, as a super-wise 10-year-old, told me at age five, “You may be pointing one finger at me, but you’re pointing three fingers at yourself.”

Indeed.

It was last Sunday and I was standing outside of Dove of Peace Lutheran Church in Tucson. I had recently learned that their choir director Eric Holtan is a convicted child sex offender. He is possibly in violation of his probation—he is not registered anywhere, as ordered by the courts. I was there to talk to parishioners about the news, tell them how to report abuse (by Holtan or anyone else), and show them safe ways to talk to their kids about abuse. I also wanted to talk to church leaders, who had not responded to my emails and phone calls, to make sure that men like Holtan are not hired into positions of power in this church or any other.

I met a lovely family and a few nice parishioners who were anxious to talk. One women told me that her daughter had been molested as a child by a choir director. We hugged, sharing our mutual loss. I also learned that most of the families at the church only learned about Holtan’s conviction the day before, when they received a letter from the pastor in anticipation of my visit. If I had never raised the issue, would church members still be in the dark?

There were critics, too. There was the man who simply told me, “Eric is my friend. I don’t care what you say.” He was followed by people who politely declined to talk to me, saying that they knew and

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North Coast Children’s Home under Royal Commission spotlight

AUSTRALIA
Daily Examiner

Jessica Grewal 14th Nov 2013

THE treatment of abuse victims at the North Coast Children’s Home will be the focus of public inquiry headed by the Royal Commission in Sydney next week.

Earlier this year, whistleblower Richard Campion told the Royal Commission into institutional child abuse, he and about 22 others had endured a decade of physical and sexual abuse at the home, which was run by the Church of England at Lismore.

For years Mr Campion wrote open letters to the Anglican Church detailing the abuse children had been subjected to but it wasn’t until May this year that the church recognised and apologised for the way it had handled the allegations.

The public hearings will look into the response of the Anglican Diocese of Grafton to claims of child sexual abuse at the home and the policies adopted and applied by the diocese for handling such claims.

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Crown withdraws sex assault charges against Pembroke priest

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

BY MEGHAN HURLEY, OTTAWA CITIZEN NOVEMBER 13, 2013

OTTAWA — The charges against a 72-year-old Pembroke priest accused of a historic sexual assault were withdrawn in court on Tuesday.

Father Howard Chabot was charged in July with sexual assaulting a boy and gross indecency after allegations were made to police about an 1985 incident.

Chabot’s lawyer, Mark Huckabone, said Wednesday the charges were withdrawn after Crown attorney Jason Nicol conceded there was no reasonable prospect of conviction.

Chabot was a priest at Holy Name Parish in Pembroke, but he had also worked as a chaplain with the police force for 20 years.

Bruce Pappin, a spokesman for the Pembroke diocese, said in July that Chabot was ordained as a priest in 1968.

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The Heron’s Nest: The Battle of O’Hara

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

By Phil Heron, Delaware County Daily Times
POSTED: 11/13/13

PHIL HERON

This one is going to get ugly.

Marie Rogai is out as the principal at Cardinal O’Hara High School. But she has no intention of going quietly.

After being forced out after three years at the helm of the massive archdiocesan high school on Sproul Road in Springfield on Monday, Rogai decided to fire back.

The she hired a lawyer.

Uh-oh.

Not only is Rogai, who also taught advanced placement Spanish classes at the school, saying she was given no reason for her termination, she is alleging that she was the victim of unwanted advances from a male member of the school advisory board who voted her out.

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O’Hara Principal Fired, Says She Fended Off Harassment

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Weekly

BY JOEL MATHIS | NOVEMBER 13, 2013

The Inquirer reports: “The principal of Cardinal O’Hara High School claims that she was fired this week because she rebuffed advances from a prominent member of the school community, but the Archdiocese of Philadelphia says she lost her job because of poor leadership and vision.”

Marie Rogai, who became the school’s first female principal in 2010, says she “repeatedly” fended off physical contact from an unnamed, prominent volunteer in the school community. Archdiocese officials said they were unaware of those allegations, and would investigate. Rogai said, in an open letter to parents, that the only direct reasons she was given for dismissal “were that she was ‘too direct’ and did not smile enough.”

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Altar Boy’s Family Sues Church in Sex Abuse Case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

[with video]

The Philadelphia family says their son would not have died if the Archdiocese of Philadelphia had heeded complaints.

Wednesday, Nov 13, 2013

Relatives of an alleged priest-abuse victim who died of a drug overdose say the man would still be alive if the Archdiocese of Philadelphia had heeded complaints about the cleric.

Attorneys for the family of Sean McIlmail announced a wrongful death lawsuit against Roman Catholic church officials on Wednesday.

They say the archdiocese moved the Rev. Robert L. Brennan from parish to parish, allowing him to prey on children. McIlmail claimed Brennan abused him for years, beginning at age 11.

Prosecutors filed charges in September against Brennan based on McIlmail’s allegations.

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Bishops’ Planned Statement on Pornography — Come again?

UNITED STATES
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

Editorial

We cannot let a planned United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) formal statement put into motion at the Bishops meeting underway this week in Baltimore to pass into the world of drafting, revision, and adoption without noting the gall of it.

The Bishops are going to draft a statement on pornography.

[US Conference of Catholic Bishops]

Bishop Richard J. Malone, chair-elect of the Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth, the committee that will draft the document had this to say about it, “The number of men, women, and children who have been harmed by pornography use is not negligible, and we have an opportunity to offer healing and hope to those who have been wounded.”

The statement, the USCCB press release says, “will be pastoral in nature and will emphasize the effects of pornography on marriages and families, while attending to all those harmed by pornography use and addiction.”

Bishop Robert Finn of Kansas City- St. Joseph Missouri remains a sitting bishop with jurisdiction after being convicted of failure to report, as a mandatory reporter in Missouri, a priest of the diocese, Shawn Ratigan, who is now serving a 50 year sentence in federal prison on a child pornography conviction.

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Former Lawrence pastor accused of abuse ion Maryland

LAWRENCE (MA)
The Eagle-Tribune

By Yadira Betances
ybetances@eagletribune.com

LAWRENCE — The Rev. Michael Kolodziej, former pastor of Holy Trinity Parish has been suspended from public ministry and cannot serve as a priest after being accused of sexually abusing a minor at Archbishop Curley High School in Baltimore.

A former student alleges he was abused on several occasions while wrestling between 1975 to 1979 when Kolodziej taught at the school, according to a statement released by the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

Upon learning of the allegations, the police were informed and the school, the Franciscan Order, and the archdiocese are fully cooperating with the authorities, the release said. The three religious organizations do not know of any other misconduct against the priest while he was at Archbishop Curley, according to the release.

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Hasidic Rabbi On The Run From The Law Holes Up In Zimbabwe

ZIMBABWE
Failed Messiah

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

After abruptly leaving Morocco last week, Rabbi Eliezer Berland has reportedly relocated to Zimbabwe.

Berland lived in Morocco for seven months and Zurich and Miami for several months before that after fleeing Israel pending arrest for allegedly sexually abusing female followers, some of who were allegedly minors at the time the abuse took place.

Although Moroccan and Israeli media reports and reports on FailedMessiah.com said Berland was expelled from Morocco by the country’s king immediately after the king read a local media report detailing Berland’s alleged crimes, Moroccan media is now reporting that the king has now said that Berland is welcome back in Morocco at any time. Berland was allegedly forced to leave Morocco only because of the growing number of hasidim who followed him there and were trying to set up a community.

A follower has reportedly rented a private home in Zimbabwe for Berland to use. It is unclear how many hasidim are with him.

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The Victorian State Parliamentary Enquiry Report (Or: Better Than We Thought Possible)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Victorian state Parliamentary Enquiry into child sexual abuse by clergy has presented its 800 page report to the Victorian Parliament. It is entitled “Betrayal of Trust”. It contains recommendations hoped for, but not necessarily expected, to control the excesses of religious organisations. While the report and recommendations apply only to the state of Victoria, it is anticipated that the reforms will be adopted by other states, and will be revisited by the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. National legislation is likely, eventually, for consistency of approach and to encompass crimes which cross state borders.

The bi-partisan inquiry heard from more than 450 victims over a 12 month period, and its report names the Catholic Church and the Salvation Army as the main culprits. However, it notes that the Catholic Church was responsible for six times as many abuse cases as all of the other churches combined.

It has compiled 604 complaint files, but notes that the number of victims, in Victoria State alone, runs into the thousands. It has referred 135 previously-unreported claims of child sex abuse to the police Sano Taskforce, set up to investigate institutionalized child abuse. More such referrals are expected to be made. Overall, it received 578 submissions and held 162 hearings, of which 56 were private, including in the cities of Melbourne, Ballarat, Bendigo and Geelong. As a result, the report states that the churches “stand condemned”.

The Victorian enquiry is one of about 80 enquiries over recent years, so that it is about time for actions as well as enquiries.

The main recommendations from the report are as follows:

1. Compulsory reporting to police – Legislative amendments to ensure that a person who fails to report, or conceals, child abuse will be guilty of an offence. At present, under section 326 of Victoria’s Crimes Act, it must be proved that a person who conceals a serious indictable offence “received a benefit” and the committee recommends that this “element of ‘gain’ should be removed”. At present, this is what has let clergy off the hook, even where a cover-up has been firmly established. The recommendation is in conflict with the Catholic Church’s stance on the “inviolability of the confessional”.

2. New child endangerment offence – Making it a criminal offence for people in authority to knowingly put a child at risk, or fail to remove them from a known risk. This applies to the practice of transferring offenders to new parishes or schools, where new victims are often produced. It thus puts the onus on the official who engages in this practice. The recommendation refers to the situation in which “a person gives responsibility to another for the care of children and is aware there is a risk of harm to those children and who fails to take reasonable steps to protect them from that risk”. There will no doubt be debate about what being “aware there is a risk of harm” means and how “failing to take reasonable steps” is actually defined.

3.A new grooming offence – Creation of a separate criminal offence extending beyond current grooming laws to make it an offence to groom a child, their parents or others with the intention of committing a sexual offence against the child (regardless of whether the sexual offence occurs). A problem with this may be that it would be able to be challenged by smart lawyers for being too vague a definition. Parliament would have to be very specific, as to what constitutes “grooming”, in its legislation here to avoid such problems.

4. Address legal entity of non-government organisations – Require non-government organisations to be incorporated and adequately insured. This is a critical recommendation for the ability of victims to sue churches, and removes the appalling “Ellis Defence” used in the past by Cardinal George Pell to avoid paying compensation (see previous posting). It also removes the practice of setting up trusts for church money which are immune from the courts, for example the bogus “cemetery maintenance trusts” (see previous posting). The provision for compulsory insurance removes the defence of “yes, but we’ll just declare bankruptcy”. In the absence of a clear pathway to the courts, in the past, victims have had to merely accept the church’s, pathetic, settlements.

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Charges dropped against priest

CANADA
The Daily Observer

PEMBROKE – Charges against a former Pembroke priest have been dropped.

The Crown formally withdrew two charges against Father Howard Chabot on Tuesday in a Pembroke provincial court. Crown attorney Jason Nicol told the court the charges were being withdrawn because there was “no reasonable cause for conviction.”

Justice Robert Selkirk consented to the Crown’s request. Chabot, 73, had been arrested July 29 and charged with one count of sexual assault and one count of gross indecency. He had been represented by defense counsel Mark Huckabone.

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TV report: Archbishop Nienstedt, others under criminal investigation

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

At KSTP-TV, Jay Kolls is reporting: “Sources tell 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS officials at the Archdiocese are part of a criminal investigation by St. Paul Police, including Archbishop John Nienstedt and former Vicar-General Father Peter Laird. We are told the investigation, in part, involves possible child pornography on a computer used by former priest John Shelley. St. Paul Police closed their case into the child pornography when they could not find enough evidence to charge Shelley. But, sources tell KSTP, police are looking at ‘everything’ connected to the case, including possible obstruction of justice, failure to report possible sexual abuse as required by the state’s mandatory reporting statute and possible child endangerment.”

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Family of Priest Accuser Sues Philadelphia Archdiocese Over Young Man’s Death

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Mark Abrams

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — The family of a Willow Grove, Pa. man who died of an accidental drug overdose a month ago (see related story) — after cooperating with authorities in bringing charges in a clergy sex abuse case — has filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia and the young man’s alleged abuser.

Attorneys for the family of 26-year-old Sean McIlmail insist it’s not about the money, but the search for truth and justice for all victims of clergy sex abuse in the archdiocese.

Sean’s mother, Deborah, says the family is still trying to cope with the loss.

“Sean appeared good on the outside,” she said today, “but on the inside, he didn’t believe in himself. The unspeakable, disgusting horrors that had happened to Sean by Father Robert L. Brennan would haunt Sean forever.”

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Pa. family who lost son sues church in abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CT Post

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Relatives of an alleged priest-abuse victim who died of a drug overdose say the man would still be alive if the Archdiocese of Philadelphia had heeded complaints about the cleric.

Attorneys for the family of Sean McIlmail announced a wrongful death lawsuit against Roman Catholic church officials on Wednesday.

They say the archdiocese moved the Rev. Robert L. Brennan from parish to parish, allowing him to prey on children. McIlmail claimed Brennan abused him for years, beginning at age 11.

Prosecutors filed charges in September against Brennan based on McIlmail’s allegations. They were dropped last month after McIlmail died of an overdose.

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Overdose victim’s family sues Archdiocese for wrongful death

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

Story Highlights
A wrongful death lawsuit was filed Wednesday the mother of Sean Patrick McIlmail.
The lawsuit contends that church officials’ failure to remove Rev. Robert L. Brennan.
Brennan molested McIlmail from ages 11 to 14, beginning in 1998.

JOSEPH A. SLOBODZIAN, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
POSTED: Wednesday, November 13, 2013

A wrongful death lawsuit was filed Wednesday against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia by the mother of Sean Patrick McIlmail, the 26-year-old Willow Grove man whose accidental overdose death last month ended the criminal prosecution of the Rev. Robert L. Brennan for rape.

The lawsuit by Deborah McIlmail was filed in Philadelphia Common Pleas Court also names Brennan and Msgr. William J. Lynn, the former church official responsible for investigating allegations of misconduct by priests.

Lynn, 62, former secretary for clergy, was found guilty of child-endangerment in a trial last year and is serving 3 to 6 years in prison.

The lawsuit contends that church officials’ failure to remove Brennan, a priest with a long history of complaints about misconduct with young boys, directly led to him molesting Patrick McIlmail from ages 11 to 14, beginning in 1998, when he was an altar boy at Resurrection of Our Lord parish at Castor Avenue and Vista Street in Rhawnhurst.

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PA – Wrongful death suit filed vs. predator priest; SNAP responds

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2013

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 312-399-4747, SNAPblaine@gmail.com )

This is an absolutely heartbreaking case. We grieve with the relatives and friends of Sean McIlmail. And we share their sad belief that only through brave legal action will other innocent children be spared the horror of childhood sexual victimization by Catholic clerics and adult psychological victimization by Catholic officials.

This suit is brought by Deborah and Michael McIlmail, kind but wounded parents, on behalf of their son and other children who have been assaulted by priests, nuns, seminarians, and other Catholic employees. We are deeply moved by and grateful for their deep courage.

For years, these parents fought valiantly to help and save their son. They have suffered immeasurably. We hope and believe this action will bring them some measure of comfort and justice. Because they are speaking up and exposing corruption, they are helping to protect others. From this day forward, they can take some consolation in knowing that they’re doing all they can to prevent more devastating clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

Father Robert L. Brennan could – and should – still be charged, convicted and kept away from kids. There are, we strongly suspect, several of his victims who are young enough to still pursue criminal cases. For the safety of children, we desperately hope they will do so.

And we hope that every single current and former church employee or member, who saw, suspected or suffered crimes or misdeeds – by Father Brennan or other clerics – will find courage and speak up. That’s what protects kids – when adults care enough to call police and prosecutors about known or suspected child sex crimes.

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Judge plans to release documents from clergy abuse lawsuit

CALIFORNIA
Monterey County Herald

The Monterey County Herald
Herald Staff Report
POSTED: 11/13/2013

A Monterey judge says he plans to release some of the depositions and documents produced during a clergy abuse lawsuit against the Catholic Diocese of Monterey and one of its former priests.

In a preliminary determination filed Nov. 6 after review of the documents, Superior Court Judge Thomas Wills says evidence gathered in pre-trail proceedings in a case that ultimately settled, will not be released until after a Dec. 9 hearing to give the parties a chance to take issue with the order. He also stayed the decision for 30 days to give parties an opportunity to take it to appeals court.

The alleged victim filed suit against the Diocese and Father Edward Fitz-Henry in February 2011, alleging Fitz-Henry molested the former altar boy at Madonna del Salsso Church in Salinas in 2005. The diocese concluded the claims were credible, paid the alleged victim $500,000 and suspended Fitz-Henry.

The diocese had sought a protective order while the case was on track for trial and that order remained in effect after the settlement.

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Judge allows release of some records in priest sex-abuse case.

CALIFORNIA
Monterey County Weekly

Posted: Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Mary Duan and Sara Rubin

A judge has ordered the release of documents and deposition transcripts in the case of Father Edward Fitz-Henry, a Catholic priest suspended amidst allegations he molested a teenage parishioner at Madonna del Sasso Church in Salinas, and may have abused other young boys in the Monterey Diocese decades ago.

Monterey Superior Court Judge Tom Wills’ decision comes after the Monterey County Weekly filed a motion to intervene in a civil suit brought by the most recent alleged victim, a man now in his early 20s who claims Fitz-Henry assaulted him multiple times while at Madonna del Sasso starting in around 2005.

In making his preliminary order, Wills ordered the deposition of Don Cline, a former Salinas cop hired by the Diocese to investigate the abuse allegations, to be heavily redacted before its release, meaning portions of the text will be removed or blacked out.

Wills also ordered Fitz-Henry’s own deposition transcript to be heavily redacted, and ordered the same for the deposition of Agnes Leonardich, the former Superintendent of Schools for the Diocese, and Father Nicholas Milich, a priest who allegedly knew about the most recent allegations against Fitz-Henry but failed to alert authorities.

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Philadelphia Press Conference Today

News Release

November 13, 2013

Family of Sean Patrick McIlmail to File Lawsuit Naming Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Msgr.William Lynn, and Fr. Robert L. Brennan

Archdiocesan Officials had knowledge of Brennan’s inappropriate behavior with young boys as early as 1988

(Philadelphia, PA) – At a press conference today, Philadelphia-area Attorneys Marci Hamilton and Dan Monahan will announce the filing of a lawsuit on behalf of the estate and family of Sean Patrick McIlmail, a sexual abuse survivor who recently pressed charges against Father Robert L. Brennan. District Attorney Seth Williams announced the charges on September 26, 2013, but withdrew those charges on October 23, 2013, after Sean tragically passed away from an accidental drug overdose. Members of Sean’s family will also be present and will speak about Sean, his experience and the importance of pursuing truth and justice for Sean.

The lawsuit alleges that the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Cardinal Bevilacqua, and Msgr. William Lynn knew of numerous child sexual abuse allegations against Robert L. Brennan at least ten years before Brennan sexually abused Sean. Brennan was sent for evaluation on numerous occasions after which the Archdiocese and its representatives persistently and intentionally misled parishioners, parents, and other priests about Brennan’s extreme risk to children, placing him back in ministry.

Whistleblowers came forward complaining about Brennan’s inappropriate behavior with minor boys only to go unnoticed and ignored. The Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Cardinal Bevilacqua and Msgr. William Lynn, negligently and recklessly assigned Brennan to positions with ample access to children, including St. Mary’s Parish in Schwenksville, PA, St. Ignatius Parish in Yardley, and Resurrection Parish in Rhawnhurst, among others.

WHEN: Wednesday November 13, 2013 at 1:00 PM EST

WHERE: Marriott Downtown, 12th and Market
Rooms 304-305
Philadelphia, PA

NOTES:

· This is the 18th civil lawsuit filed by Hamilton, Monahan and Anderson involving the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

· Copies of the Complaint will be available at the press conference.

Attorney Marci Hamilton said: “The McIlmail family is united, resolute, and uncommonly brave in the face of this terrible tragedy. Sean suffered debilitating shame and humiliation as a result of Brennan’s abuse of him, and struggled for years to deal with the abuse. His family did everything they possibly could to support him, and he had made dramatic strides over the last year. They are devastated that he lost his battle with drug addiction, which was caused by the extreme stress of dealing with the abuse, and the callous cover-up, by his home archdiocese, Philadelphia. Sean’s story is the horrific story of too many child sex abuse victims. It is time to bring the institutions that create the conditions for abuse to justice and to force out the full truth, so that we can turn the tide on America’s epidemic of child sex abuse and the institutions that let it happen. Legal justice is what Sean wanted and what he deserves.”

Attorney Daniel Monahan said: “As with all of the other cases we have filed against the Philadelphia Archdiocese, the abuse in this case never should have happened. Sean was only 2-years-old when the Archdiocese first learned about Brennan’s inappropriate acts with children. Had they done the right thing then, Sean would be with us here today, and he might have had the family he dreamed about. Instead, the McIlmail family has had to suffer the worst tragedy any parent can suffer, the loss of a child, because of the callous failures of the Archdiocese.”

Attorney Jeff Anderson said: “We are honored to stand beside Sean’s family today. Sean courageously came forward and started the journey to hold Brennan and top Archdiocesan officials accountable and to help protect other children by reporting Brennan to law enforcement. This lawsuit is a continuation of those efforts and from this unspeakable horror we will continue to fight for truth and justice in Sean’s memory and for all of the other brave survivors who have come forward and who are still suffering in shame, silence and secrecy.”

WHO:

Attorney and Professor Marci Hamilton is one of the United States’ leading church/state legal scholars, as well as an expert on child sex abuse in religious and secular institutions. Professor Hamilton holds the Paul R. Verkuil Chair in Public Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University, where she has taught for over 20 years. She is the author of God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law (Cambridge University Press 2005), and Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children (Cambridge 2008, 2012). Professor Hamilton is a 1988 magna cum laude graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Law School and served as Editor-in-Chief of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review. She clerked for Judge Edward R. Becker of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and Justice Sandra Day O’Connor of the United States Supreme Court. She is a resident of Bucks County. Contact: Office/212.790.0215 Mobile 215.353.8984

Attorney Dan Monahan has represented thousands of individuals including victims of crime in personal injury cases throughout Pennsylvania since graduating from Villanova Law School in 1978. He is a Board Certified Trial Advocate and admitted to practice law before the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, the Federal District Court and the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Advocacy. He is a resident of Chester County.

Contact: Office/610.363.3888 Mobile/484.883.2901

Attorney Jeff Anderson (available by phone), is a St. Paul, Minnesota-based, trial lawyer widely recognized as a pioneer in sexual abuse litigation. One of the first trial lawyers in America to publicly and aggressively initiate suits against religious organizations and hold them responsible by utilizing the American civil justice system, Anderson has represented thousands of survivors of sexual abuse by authority figures and clergy. Contact: Office/651.227.9990 Mobile/612.817.8665

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Padre acusado de abuso sexual conhece sentença em dezembro

PORTUGAL
TVI 24

[Summary: A judgment in the case of a priest accused of 19 crimes of sexual abuse of minors will be read in December in open court. The trial began Sept. 19 behind closed doors to protect privacy of the victims.]

O Tribunal do Fundão marcou para 02 de dezembro a leitura do acórdão do processo em que um padre está acusado de 19 crimes de abuso sexual de menores, confirmou à Lusa a oficial de justiça que acompanhou hoje a sessão.

O julgamento, que tem no banco dos réus o ex-vice-reitor do Seminário do Fundão, começou no dia 19 de setembro e decorreu à porta fechada para proteger as vítimas menores.

A leitura do acórdão, que ocorre quase um ano depois de o padre ter sido detido – a 07 de dezembro de 2012 – tem início marcado para as 15:00 e já será pública.

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MD – Priest, accused of abuse in Baltimore, gets “off the hook”

MARYLAND
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2013

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

A credibly accused predator priest who spent time at three institutions in Baltimore and is accused of molesting in Maryland got “off the hook” yesterday when a court ruling ended a lawsuit against him and his church supervisors.

[Bangor Daily News]

Fr. Raymond P. Melville worked at Our Lady of Good Counsel parish in Locust Point (1980 to 1984), the University of Maryland Hospital (1982 to 1983), and attended the University of Baltimore and St. Mary’s Seminary (1979 to 1985). Fr. Melville’s been accused of abusing while at the seminary (as well as in Maine).

[BishopAccountabilty.org]

[BishopAccountabilty.org]

He spent much of his clerical career in Maine. Yesterday, the Maine Supreme Court ruled that a civil suit charging that the Maine Catholic hierarchy should have disclosed Fr. Melville’s crimes should be tossed out.

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Reforms remove barriers to church victim payouts

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 14, 2013

Jane Lee
Legal Affairs Reporter for The Age

Victims will have a much better chance of claiming compensation for historic child abuse from religious and other organisations if the state inquiry’s recommendations are implemented, lawyers say.

After an 18-month inquiry, the parliamentary committee investigating the matter recommended law reforms to remove major barriers that typically prevent victims from successfully suing the Catholic Church and other religious bodies. These include:

* Dismantling the “Ellis defence”, which prevents unincorporated religious organisations from being sued.

* Excluding child abuse from the statute of limitations, which bars lawsuits after a certain period.

* Creating an independent “alternative justice avenue” for criminal child-abuse victims.

Lawyer Angela Sdrinis said that as a package, the reforms were “the victims’ wish list”.

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New offence sought for leaders who put young at risk of abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

November 14, 2013

Barney Zwartz
Religion editor, The Age.

The Salvation Army says it is ashamed and deeply sorry for the brutal abuse suffered by many children in its care, following the release of an eagerly awaited report on clergy child sex abuse.
The report, launched in the Victorian Parliament on Wednesday, also recommends sweeping changes to laws behind which the Catholic Church has sheltered, and accuses its leaders of trivialising the problem as a “short-term embarrassment”.

The report, Betrayal of Trust, wants to establish a new crime when people in authority knowingly put a child a risk. It wants to make it a crime to leave a child at risk or not report abuse, including for clergy, but does not recommend ending the exemption for the confessional.

Grooming a child or parents should be a crime, child abuse should be excluded from the statute of limitations, and the present church systems of dealing with victims in-house should be replaced by an independent authority funded by the churches, the report says.

The report was the result of a Victorian parliamentary inquiry into sexual abuse that began last year. A separate national Royal Commission into abuse will prepare an interim report by the middle of next year.

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Clergy sex abuse report urges new laws to punish perpetrators

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 14, 2013

Barney Zwartz

The state government’s report on clergy child sex abuse recommends sweeping changes to laws behind which the Catholic Church has sheltered, and accuses its leaders of trivialising the problem as a ”short-term embarrassment”.

Inquiry chairwoman Georgie Crozier spoke of ”a betrayal beyond comprehension” and children suffering ”unimaginable harm”. Launching the report in State Parliament on Wednesday, she said the inquiry had referred 135 previously unreported claims of child sex abuse to the police.

The report, Betrayal of Trust, wants to establish a new crime when people in authority knowingly put a child at risk. It wants to make it a crime to leave a child at risk or not report abuse, including for clergy, but does not recommend ending the exemption for the confessional. Grooming a child or parents should be a crime, child abuse should be excluded from the civil law’s statute of limitations, and the present church systems of dealing with victims in-house should be replaced by an independent authority funded by the churches, the report says. Premier Denis Napthine said the government would act quickly to begin drafting legislation reflecting the recommendations.

He said the abuse detailed in the report was ”absolutely appalling” and the religious leaders involved should hang their heads in shame.

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Striking down the silence of sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Age

The Victorian joint parliamentary committee’s report into child sex abuse marks a watershed moment for our community. With an unwavering eye on the rights and needs of victims, the committee has peeled away layers of secrecy imposed by perpetrators of sexual abuse and by the non-government organisations which, for decades, did nothing about it. The committee members should be congratulated. Their report is deeply respectful, insightful and measured while traversing awful and confronting evidence of abuse.

This report should change us and the way our community lives. If, as we urge, the government adopts the proposed reforms, protective measures would be strengthened and victims’ avenues for redress improved. For example, anyone who conceals abuse or fails to report it would be criminally liable; an officer of an organisation who puts a child at risk or fails to take reasonable steps to protect a child, knowing there is risk, may be held criminally liable for endangering the child’s welfare. There is also a proposal to review the Wrongs Act to make organisations directly liable for criminal acts of abuse by employees.

These are important proposals because they go beyond staff selection procedures (such as compulsory checks on employees who will work with children) and impose an enduring duty on organisations to stay alert to the potential for abuse.

The inquiry has offered a glimpse into the unfathomable hurt wrought on several thousands of people in this state whose lives were damaged by sexual abuse. It has also highlighted the utter disregard some organisations demonstrated for those same victims’ rights, in particular the shameful conduct of the Catholic Church. That organisations as rich and powerful as the church ignored victims’ complaints, deliberately obfuscated or denied the wrongdoing of criminals in their ranks, almost defies belief today. That the church spends millions of dollars trying to beat down victims’ damages claims is simply reprehensible.

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Sex abuse families hear the words so badly wanted

AUSTRALIA
The Age

November 14, 2013

Jane Lee
Legal Affairs Reporter for The Age

Chrissie and Anthony Foster showed the inquiry’s committee photographs of their daughter Emma’s arms, bloodied by a suicide attempt after she was repeatedly abused by a Catholic priest.

In a matter of hours, they calmly detailed the pain that had helped define their family’s lives. Their daughters, Emma and Katie, had been repeatedly raped by Father Kevin O’Donnell. Emma later committed suicide and Katie was left in a wheelchair after an accident.

But when the committee tabled its report, with recommendations to prevent similar crimes against children, there were no words left for the couple.

They went to embrace the MPs Georgie Crozier and David O’Brien as they entered a room filled with victims and victims’ advocates. Mrs Foster said the committee had been compassionate to victims, believed their stories and acted.

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Milwaukee archdiocese reaches deal with insurers

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Wisconsin Radio Network

November 13, 2013 By Bob Hague

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milwaukee has made a move toward resolving a long-running bankruptcy case by reaching agreement with insurers, including Lloyd’s of London, to buy back policies sold to the church in exchange for avoiding liability in paying claims to victims of sex abuse by priests.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that spokesman Jerry Topczewski would not say how much the archdiocese will receive from the settlement. That will be spelled out in the church’s financial reorganization plan which must be approved in federal bankruptcy court, although Topczewski did not know when that plan will be filed.

The Milwaukee Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in 2011, in the wake of cases of sex abuse by priests dating back for decades. Archdiocesan officials have stated they don’t have the money to pay millions-of-dollars to those victims. In one of the most contentious Catholic bankruptcy actions in the U.S., both sides have argued over which victims should get compensated and which assets can be protected from creditors.

A bankruptcy court ruled the archdiocese could not tap assets from local parishes to pay creditors, including some 575 sex abuse victims who filed for compensation in the bankruptcy. The attorney representing victims, Michael Finnegan, said the Lloyd’s of London settlement excludes victims. He said that was a first among bankruptcies filed by U.S. Catholic dioceses.

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Insurance companies to buy back policies as part of Milwaukee Archdiocese bankruptcy

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WTAQ

MILWAUKEE (WSAU-Wheeler News) The Milwaukee Catholic Archdiocese has taken a big step toward resolving its nearly three-year-old bankruptcy case. A group of insurers that includes Lloyd’s of London has agreed to buy back policies they sold to the church, in exchange for avoiding liability in paying claims to victims of sex abuse by priests.

Church spokesman Jerry Topczewski would not say how much the archdiocese will get from the settlement. He says it will be spelled out in the church’s financial re-organization plan which must be approved in federal bankruptcy court. Topczewski did not know when the plan will be filed. Media reports say settlement talks continue with another carrier, Stonewall Insurance.

The Milwaukee Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in 2011, saying it doesn’t have the money to pay millions-of-dollars to victims of sex abuse by priests dating back for decades. It’s been one of the most hard-fought Catholic bankruptcy actions in the country, as both sides have wrangled over which victims should get compensated — and which assets can be protected from creditors.

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Pope vents fury at corruption

VATICAN CITY
Irish Independent

NICK SQUIRES – 12 NOVEMBER 2013

Pope Francis has delivered a fiery sermon against corruption, quoting a passage from the Bible in which Jesus said some sinners deserved to be tied to a rock and thrown into the sea.

In one of his strongest homilies since he was elected in March, the Pontiff said Christians who led “a double life” by giving money to the church while stealing from the state were sinners who deserved to be punished.

Quoting from the Gospel of St Luke in the New Testament, he said: “Jesus says it would be better for him if a millstone were put around his neck and he be thrown into the sea.”

While he did not allude directly to corruption within the Roman Catholic Church, his remarks yesterday came just days after a scandal erupted inside an ancient religious order linked to the Vatican, and as he forged ahead with a determined effort to root out cronyism within the Holy See and financial irregularities in the scandal-tainted Vatican bank.

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Pope Francis ‘may be at risk from Italian mafia’

VATICAN CITY
Telegraph (UK)

The Pope’s efforts to tackle corruption within the Catholic Church could put him at risk from the Italian mafia, a leading prosecutor warns

By Nick Squires, Rome3:15PM GMT 13 Nov 2013

Pope Francis is at risk of mafia retribution as a result of his determination to clean up corruption and cronyism within the Catholic Church, one of Italy’s best known anti-mob prosecutors said.

Nicola Gratteri, who has lived under police protection for nearly 25 years, said the Jesuit Pope’s campaign to tackle graft was upsetting powerful crime organisations in Italy, which have in the past enjoyed a cosy relationship with the Catholic hierarchy.

“Those who have up until now profited from the power and wealth deriving from the Church are now nervous, agitated. The Pope is dismantling centres of economic power in the Vatican,” said Mr Gratteri, 55, who has spent his career fighting the ‘Ndrangheta mafia of Calabria in the far south of Italy.

“I don’t know if organised crime is in a position to do something, but certainly they are thinking about it. It could be dangerous. If the godfathers can trip him up, they would not hesitate to do so,” he told Il Fatto Quotidiano, an Italian daily.

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Pope Francis ‘is mafia target after campaigning against corruption’

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

Tom Kington in Rome
The Guardian, Wednesday 13 November 2013

Pope Francis’s crusade against corruption has made him a target for Italy’s all-powerful mafia clans, a leading anti-mob prosecutor has warned.

Nicola Gratteri, who has battled Calabria’s shadowy ‘Ndrangheta mafia, said on Wednesday that Francis’s attempt to bring transparency to the Vatican was making the white collar mobsters who do business with corrupt prelates “nervous and agitated”.

He told the Italian daily Il Fatto Quotidiano: “Pope Francis is dismantling centres of economic power in the Vatican.

“If the bosses could trip him up they wouldn’t hesitate. I don’t know if organised criminals are in a position to do something, but they are certainly thinking about it. They could be dangerous.”

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Mafia are considering assassinating the Pope in response to his anti-corruption sermons, warns leading Italian prosecutor

VATICAN CITY
Daily Mail (UK)

By HANNAH ROBERTS

The Mafia are considering a lethal strike on Pope Francis, a senior prosecutor in Italy’s crime-torn deep South has warned.

The pontiff’s life is in danger because his desire to sweep away corruption in ‘a total clean-up’ is making organised criminal groups ‘nervous’, the deputy chief prosecutor of Reggio Calabria, Nicola Gratteri, claimed.

Since Francis took office in April, he has made it clear that he intends to rid the Holy See of its corrupt ways and clean up the notorious Vatican bank, long used by money launderers.

He immediately dispatched the chairman of the IOR bank Gotti Tedeschi and subsequently forced his own number two Cardinal Bertone, who had been accused of corruption, into retirement.

In one of his first sermons as Pope he took aim at the mafia calling on them to repent for ‘exploiting and enslaving people’.

And earlier this week in his most impassioned sermon to date, the pontiff said that officials who took bribes should be ‘tied to a rock and thrown in the sea’.

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‘We’ll Say You Touched Us’: Robbers Attempt to Extort Priest With Threat of Abuse Claim

CHICAGO (IL)
TheMediaReport

According to a truly shocking story in the Chicago Tribune, two men recently walked into the sacristy of a Catholic church after Mass and demanded cash from a 73-year-old priest.

That alone is frightening enough. But what accompanied their demand should send chills through any decent person. One of the men ominously said to the priest:

“We’ll say you touched us, read the paper, they’ll believe us.”

Indeed, such words are the fear of every living cleric. It is open season on Catholic priests today. An accusation, threat, or mere suggestion of abuse is enough to destroy a priest’s reputation and vault a man out of the priesthood forever.

Even long-deceased priests with previously unblemished records are not immune from specious accusations, which the media then dutifully and loudly trumpet.

Whereas mainstream media outlets like the New York Times and the Boston Globe are willing to fall over themselves to report any and all accusations against Catholic priests – no matter how long ago or how flimsy – the time is long overdue for them to seriously address the issue of false accusations and the dauntingly vulnerable position which priests in society find themselves today.

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Validation is a start, say victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

RACHEL BAXENDALE
From: The Australian
November 14, 2013

LEONIE Sheedy witnessed brutality almost every day of the 13 years she spent in a Catholic orphanage as a child.

Yesterday, the Care Leavers Australia Network founder and spokeswoman said she was pleased with the recommendations of the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into the handling of child abuse by religious and other non-government organisations, but felt that it should have included abuse in state-run institutions in its terms of reference.

“I feel very encouraged. The Victorian parliament and the committee have validated all the stories,” she said.

“They’ve recognised the extreme, heinous crimes that were committed against Victorian children in orphanages and children’s homes run by the churches and charities, and they’ve acknowledged that these organisations need to contribute to repairing people’s lives.

“The only thing that’s missing is the state-run orphanages . . . sadly this inquiry didn’t cover those institutions, but at least the royal commission (into child sexual abuse) will cover those.”

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Vic govt to act swiftly on abuse report

AUSTRALIA
9 News

The Victorian government says it will not wait to act on a child sex abuse report that is scathing of the Catholic Church and recommends widespread legislative reform.

The government has six months to consider the recommendations of the inquiry into child sex abuse which include a call for concealing child abuse offences to be made a crime.

But Premier Denis Napthine said the government would introduce changes to the law in parliament early next year.

“The government will not wait to act on this report,” Dr Napthine said.

“Criminal abuse of children represents a departure of the gravest kind from the standards of decency fundamental to any civilised society.”

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This archishop covered up a priest’s crimes

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article posted 12 November 2013)

A court has heard how one of Australia’s most prominent Catholic archbishops, Most Reverend Sir Frank Little (of Melbourne), covered up the crimes of a priest (Father Russell Vears). A parent notified Archbishop Little about the crimes, but the church authorities managed to conceal the crimes from the police until one of the victims contacted the police three decades years later, in 2011.

Sir Frank Little was the archbishop of Melbourne (one of the largest Catholic dioceses in Australia) from 1974 to 1996 (when he was succeeded by Archbishop George Pell).

Father Russell Robert Vears (ordained in 1975) was protected by the Melbourne diocese until the 1980s. He later ceased working in parishes and changed his surname to Walker. However, although he no longer has a parish now, Vears/Walker still has not been officially stripped of his priesthood.

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Government report slams Catholic Church for cover-ups

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 13 November 2013)

Australia’s first parliamentary inquiry into church child-sex abuse tabled its report on 13 November 2013. The report, commissioned by the Victorian State Parliament, criticises the Catholic Church’s culture of cover-up and it recommends changing the laws behind which the Catholic Church has been sheltering.

The report recommends:

MAKING it compulsory for church authorities to report church-related crimes to the police;

MAKING it a criminal offence if a person in authority conceals any church sex-crimes;

A CHILD endangerment offence – making it a criminal offence for people in authority to knowingly put a child at risk, or fail to remove them from risk;

EXPANDING grooming offences to create a separate offence for grooming a child regardless of whether sexual assault actually occurs;

CIVIL law reforms to make it easier for victims to sue non-government organisations, including churches.

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