ABUSE TRACKER

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

March 11, 2014

Head of London’s Met police at Vatican trafficking conference chaired by Nichols

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet

11 March 2014 13:02 by Liz Dodd

The head of London’s Metropolitan Police, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, will attend a forthcoming Vatican conference on human trafficking which will be chaired by Cardinal Vincent Nichols.

Nichols, the cardinal-archbishop of Westminster, told BBC News yesterday that the Metropolitan Police Commissioner would be one of at least 20 senior police officers from around the world to attend the event in Rome on 9-10 April.

The conference is the second international human trafficking conference to be hosted by the Vatican but will differ from 2012’s “academic” conference by focusing on ways to build practical links between the police and the Church, Nichols added.

He said that religious congregations could form an international “counter-network” to help tackle trafficking.

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

Pope Francis disappoints, but not completely

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Pat Perriello | Mar. 11, 2014 NCR Today

It was inevitable, and the time has come. I need to write my first critical blog post on Pope Francis. It turns out that the Vatican guesthouse, Domus Sanctae Marthae, does not appear to be far enough away from the apostolic palace. Francis is unfortunately starting to sound too much like a pope. The powers that be may be getting to him even at his current residence.

I speak of his one-year anniversary interview with Italian daily Corriere Della Sera. The most troublesome part of that interview is his comments on the issue of child abuse by priests. It is the first time I have ever heard him sound as if he is merely spouting Vatican talking points. Perhaps he was annoyed that the United Nations came out so strongly against the church when he felt they had been trying to cooperate with the ­U.N. investigation.

In any event, he felt the need to defend Vatican actions and repeat the tired old positions we have been hearing for too long: The church has been transparent; child abuse happens more often among families; and only the church is being attacked. Playing the victim is so unlike Francis. His willingness to downplay the harm priests have done to children in their care is disturbing. He is likely, however, to experience considerable pressure to address the abuse issue more forcefully in the coming months.

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

Roger Pronovost, charged priest, removed from Geraldton ministry

CANADA
CBC News

The Catholic bishop responsible for the Geraldton area has removed a priest from the ministry pending the outcome of a criminal case.

Father Roger Pronovost, 56, was recently charged by provincial police with two counts of sexual assault and one count of sexual exploitation, in connection with incidents that allegedly occurred in the 1980s, when Pronovost was assigned to a church in Longlac, Ont.

The Bishop of Hearst, Vincent Cadieux, said in this kind of case, it is standard procedure to withdraw a priest from the ministry.

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

PA- Philly archbishop “betrays victims again,” SNAP says

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 11, 2014

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

Once again, Philadelphia’s archbishop has given his flock another reason to be ashamed of him.

[Arizona Daily Star]

Under fire for continuing cover ups of clergy sex crimes, Catholic officials quietly started to give free parochial school tuition to some victims. But they refused to tell all victims about this option, and then they quietly reversed themselves (relenting in one case only because a persistent journalist kept questioning them). And for months, they rebuffed one parent’s repeated requests to plead his case. Finally, adding insult to injury, Archbishop Charles Chaput, through one of his public relations staff, claims that an exception he’s finally made “is another clear signal of the archbishop’s commitment to victims of clergy sexual abuse.”

It’s not. It is, in fact, another clear signs that Chaput, like many of his brother bishops, acts irresponsibly and insensitively, often responding to abuse victims only when pressured and even then, acting capriciously.

This latest Philly scandal is typical of the callousness, deceit, cynicism and self-promotion of so many Catholic officials.

–It’s callous because it’s stingy and potentially disrupts kids’ educations.

–It’s deceitful because some victims, likely most of them, were never told about the option.

–It’s cynical because it was adopted when Philly Catholic officials were in the glare of negative publicity and was quietly shelved when that publicity began to wane.

–It’s self-promoting because even now, Chaput desperately tries to “spin” this betrayal as a “signal” of his “commitment to victims.”

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.

NY- Retired Cardinal to preside at special mass, SNAP responds

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 11, 2014

For more information: David Clohessy ( 314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

Retired Cardinal to preside at special mass
Victims want him ousted from upcoming event
He hid child sex crimes but denies all wrongdoing

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is urging New York’s top Catholic official to stop his predecessor from saying a special mass this weekend featuring children’s choirs.

This Saturday, retired New York Cardinal Edward Egan is to preside over a children’s choir mass featuring 200 youngsters at St. Ignatius Loyola parish in Manhattan. Egan has been widely criticized for allegedly hiding clergy sex crimes during his long tenure in the Bridgeport diocese and the New York archdiocese.

Because of that, and because Egan continues to deny any wrongdoing, leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, want Cardinal Timothy Dolan to oust Egan from the upcoming event.

As recently as 2012, discussing the abuse and cover up crisis, Egan said “I don’t think we did anything wrong,” “I’m very proud of how this thing was handled,” “I believe the sex abuse thing was incredibly good,” “There really wasn’t much . . . hidden” and “I do think it’s time to get off this subject.”

[Connecticut Magazine]

“This isn’t just a slap in the face to suffering victims and betrayed Catholics,” said Mary Caplan of Manhattan, SNAP’s New York director. “It’s rubbing salt into their wounds and telling other Catholic officials that ‘no matter how much you endanger kids and protect predators, your Catholic colleagues will always honor you.’”

“Cardinal Timothy Dolan and the Jesuits at this parish are smart men. They must know this is a very hurtful move,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP’s director. “Dolan should make Egan stay home and insist that no other priest in the archdiocese gives Egan – or others who have covered up clergy child sexual crimes – any prominent role in church functions, least of all at an event featuring children.”

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

Senate passes tougher sexual predator bills

FLORIDA
Tampa Tribune

By BRENDAN FARRINGTON
Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — The Florida Senate passed a package of bills Tuesday that will lock up child rapists longer, force sexual offenders to disclose more information and close loopholes that allow the most dangerous predators to avoid civil commitment after they’re punished for their crimes.

All four bills were approved unanimously and without debate on the first day of the 60-day legislative session. The Senate wanted to send a clear message that protecting people from sexual predators was its top priority. That message will be repeated in the House next week when it is expected to send the bills to Gov. Rick Scott at the first opportunity.

The mother of Somer Thompson, a 7-year-old Jacksonville-area girl who was kidnapped, raped and killed and her body dumped in a trash bin, was in tears in the Senate gallery as each of the bills passed. Just before the vote on the final bill, Republican Sen. Rob Bradley said, “This is for Somer.”

The wide-ranging package would make released sexual offenders list all cars registered to their address and double the mandatory minimum sentence for child rapists and sexually dangerous offenders to 50 years in prison. They will also strengthen the Jimmy Ryce Act, which allows for the civil commitment of sexual predators once they finish their prison terms. The law named for a 9-year-old boy who was kidnapped, raped and murdered in Miami-Dade County, is designed to keep the most violent sefaxual predators locked up.

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.

FL- Victims applaud Florida child sex laws but want one addition

FLORIDA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

We’re glad Florida lawmakers are toughening the state’s child safety laws. We hope they will include a measure to create a new statewide database of adults who have been found guilty in civil trials of child sex crimes.

[Tampa Tribune]

The existing registry – for those criminally convicted – is good. But because many predators are shrewd and many police and prosecutors are overworked and under-funded, many child sex offenders are never criminally charged or convicted.

Some of them ARE found guilty, however, in civil trials. Legislators would make it easier for citizens and employers to know who these offenders are too.

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.

Victim alleges ‘vindictive campaign’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 12, 2014

LAWYERS acting for Cardinal George Pell privately told his office they had won a “conclusive victory” against a victim of child sex abuse, which placed “a number of significant obstacles” ahead of others seeking to sue the Catholic Church.

The 2007 briefing note is one of several confidential documents tendered to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse relating to the case of former altar boy John Ellis, who was abused by a Sydney priest.

They show the church’s lawyers, Corrs Chambers Westgarth, recommended “a media campaign” to “capitalise on this result” and ensure other lawyers considering action against the church were aware of the court’s findings.

Several of the documents also appear to contradict Mr Ellis’s account of a 2009 meeting with Cardinal Pell, where the then-archbishop of Sydney claimed not to have known how his lawyers were handling the case.

“I left the meeting with the impression that Cardinal Pell was completely out of the loop on all that decision-making,” Mr Ellis told the commission. “He looked me in the eye and told me had no idea about the earlier offers (to settle the case) and that he had no idea we had offered to meet the lawyers for the archdiocese before the proceedings got under way.”

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

George Pell crushed all the church’s victims but now the church might change its tactics

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 10 March 2014)

Australia’s national Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining a 2007 civil legal case, in which Cardinal George Pell’s legal team crushed one of the church’s Sydney victims, former altar-boy John Ellis. This Pell victory (known as “the Ellis Defence”) later helped the Catholic Church to avoid paying proper compensation to victims throughout Australia. But now, as Pell departs Australia for a top job at the Vatican, he admits that Australian victims should be allowed to sue the church.

On Monday 10 March 2014, the Commission was told that Pell has submitted a written statement, suggesting that the church might have to surrender, allowing victims to sue the church after all.

The Royal Commission is examining the original complaint made by John Ellis under the church’s internal Towards Healing process “and the circumstances in which the Catholic Church raised what is commonly referred to as the ‘Ellis Defence”’.

The Sydney victim, John Ellis, had been a 14-year-old altar boy in a suburban parish in 1975, when he was sexually abused by a serial pedophile, Father Aidan Duggan. The abuse (and the church’s breach of trust) seriously damaged John Ellis’s adolescence and his later personal and working life when he was practising as a solicitor during his twenties and thirties.

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.

National churches should stand up to almighty Vatican, says cardinal

GERMANY
The Tablet (UK)

11 March 2014 by Christa Pongratz-Lippitt

A senior German Cardinal has called on national churches to speak up more courageously in their dialogue with Rome, claiming that their lack of courage has made Rome “over-powerful”.

Cardinal Karl Lehmann of Mainz, the former president of the German bishops’ conference, said in an interview with the Cologne-based daily Kölner Stadtanzeiger: “We need to be more courageous in dialogue within the Church. We complain that Rome is over-powerful but the reason why Rome is so strong is because we are too weak,” Lehmann.

He also cautioned against expecting all church renewal to come from the Pope. “I get very annoyed when we expect everything from the Pope as far as church renewal is concerned but do nothing towards renewal ourselves, or just remain silent.”

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.

“We are devastated”: Campaigner and abuse survivor Christine Buckley has died

IRELAND
The Journal

CHRISTINE BUCKLEY, AN abuse survivor who went on to found the Aislinn Centre, has passed away.

Today, a member of staff at the Aislinn Centre told TheJournal.ie: “We are all devastated. It’s a huge loss.”

She said they are in “shock” over Christine’s death after a battle with cancer:

Christine was brought up in Goldenbridge industrial school, after being born to a Nigerian medical student and a married Irish woman.

At the industrial school, she was subjected to physical and mental abuse. Christine went on to campaign on behalf of others who had survived institutional abuse.

She also co-founded the Aislinn Education and Support Centre, for survivors of abuse and their families.
Her story was told in the 1996 RTÉ documentary Dear Daughter.

Christine passed away just after 6am this morning after having been in hospital for a short period of time.

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.

Christine Buckley: Campaigner and abuse survivor dies

IRELAND
BBC News

A well-known campaigner and survivor of institutional abuse has died following a long illness.

Christine Buckley, 67, the co-founder of the Aislinn Centre, died on Tuesday morning.

She passed away at St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin. She had been suffering from cancer.

Ms Buckley was the main subject of a 1996 RTÉ drama documentary, Dear Daughter, which gave her account of life in a Dublin orphanage.

She had lived as a child in the Goldenbridge orphanage, which was run by the Sisters of Mercy.

Her story created the first major controversy around institutional child abuse in the Catholic Church in Ireland but was disputed by the Sisters of Mercy.

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

Abuse campaigner and survivor Christine Buckley dies aged 67

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Institutional abuse campaigner Christine Buckley has passed away this morning aged 67.

The Aislinn Centre co-founder died following a long cancer battle in St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin.

Christine Buckley was abandoned at three weeks of age and was raised in the Goldenbridge orphanage in Dublin, run by the Sisters of Mercy.

Her life there was the subject of a 1996 RTE documentary that caused one of the first controversies around institutional abuse from the Catholic Church in Ireland.

She is survived by her husband, Donal, and three children.

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

Campaigner and abuse survivor Christine Buckley dies

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Christine Buckley, an institutional abuse survivor who co-founded the Aislinn foundation, has died.

She passed away in a Dublin hospital early this morning after a battle with cancer.

Christine, who passed away just after 6am this morning after a brief period in hospital, is survived by her husband Donal and three children.

Christine was brought up in Goldenbridge industrial school where she was subjected to physical and mental abuse.

She campaigned on behalf of others who suffered the same abuse and was a co-founder of the Aislinn Education and Support Centre for survivors of abuse and their families.

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.

Campaigner Christine Buckley passes away after a long illness

IRELAND
Irish Independent

UPDATED 11 MARCH 2014

Christine Buckley, the courageous campaigner for victims of institutional abuse, has passed away after a long illness.

Christine was the director of the Aislinn support and education group for survivors of Industrial Schools in Ireland.

Her husband Donal Buckley told independent.ie: “She was a warrior for people’s rights, a warrior for education, a warrior for people trying to trace their parents. She was a warrior against injustice.”

Christine campaigned tirelessly on behalf of victims of institutional abuse for more than 25 years.

From the age of just three weeks, she was placed in care, and raised in St. Vincent’s Industrial School, in Goldenbridge.

She spoke privately about her own personal experiences in 1984, and then went public in 1992.

She is herself a survivor of several types of institutional abuse.

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

Archive: Christine Buckley’s letter to Pope Benedict condemning ‘apathetic’ reaction to abuse

IRELAND
Irish Independent

PUBLISHED 11 MARCH 2014

Outspoken abuse campaigner Christine Buckley has written to the Pope expressing her outrage at his “apparently apathetic approach to heinous acts of depravity” carried out by members of the clergy.

In 2009, Mrs Buckley, who was named European Volunteer of the Year, called on Pope Benedict to visit Ireland and spend seven days in repentance here.

In an open letter, the director of the Aislinn centre said that while in Ireland the Pope should help Archbishop Diarmuid Martin in a “major spring-cleaning” of the Catholic Church here.

She told him he should invite abuse survivors to tell him “their harrowing tales in the presence of those responsible for their suffering or the leaders of those organisations that were responsible”.

Mrs Buckley spent part of her childhood in the notorious Goldenbridge orphanage in Inchicore, Dublin.

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.

Institutional abuse campaigner Christine Buckley dies

IRELAND
Irish Times

Tue, Mar 11, 2014, 12:28

Christine Buckley, who co-founded the Aislin Centre, has died this morning after a long battle with cancer.

She died at St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin this morning.

She was a long-time campaigner for survivors of institutional abuse and was one of the first former residents to go public on her experiences.

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.

Catholic Church won’t budge on litigation defence, lawyer says

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Jane Lee
LEGAL AFFAIRS REPORTER FOR THE AGE

The Catholic Church continues to rely on the legal argument that it is incapable of being sued in negotiations with alleged child abuse victims, a day after Cardinal George Pell acknowledged they should be able to sue the church, a lawyer says.

Melbourne lawyer Dr Vivian Waller said she had acted on behalf of victims in two pre-arranged settlement discussions with lawyers for two Catholic orders on Tuesday.

She said the lawyers indicated, in relation to three separate victims’ abuse claims, that they may still rely on a NSW Court of Appeal decision, which is often called the Ellis defence. The court held in 2007 that the church’s property trust – its only legal entity – could not be held liable for the actions of priests.

”They’ve said they are not making a decision to abandon the Ellis defence,” Dr Waller said.

She put to them Cardinal Pell’s statement at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse on Monday. The statement, read by senior counsel Gail Furness, said that in Cardinal Pell’s view, ”the church in Australia should be able to be sued in cases of this kind”. This marked a dramatic departure from Cardinal Pell’s previous approach to victims who pursued legal action against the church.

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

Fr. Eugene Boland to resume ministry

NORTHERN IRELAND
Derry Journal

A local priest acquitted two years ago of sexual assault charges against a teenage girl is to return to ministry in the Derry diocese.

Fr Eugene Boland, a parish priest in Cappagh, County Tyrone, stepped aside four years ago while the allegations were investigated.

The administrator of the diocese said both the legal proceedings and Church processes have now been completed.

Fr Boland will resume his duties during a Mass in his parish this Saturday night.

Fr Francis Bradley, Diocesan Administrator of the Diocese of Derry, said: “I am glad the civil and canonical processes in respect of Fr Eugene Boland have drawn to a close.

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 Secret Pope Francis Haters

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

Barbie Latza Nadeau

On the one year anniversary of the pope’s election, Francis is the darling of the globe—but he does have his critics from liberals and reformers to hard-core Catholics.
No one can dispute the fact that Jorge Mario Bergoglio has had an extraordinary year since being elected to lead the Roman Catholic Church last March. Every gesture, from his choice of the name Francis to his penchant for cold-calling parishioners, has endeared him with a most unusual fanclub, including atheists and gays. He has been on the cover of the Advocate and Rolling Stone and he was voted Time’s Man of the Year. He also attracts tens of thousands of Catholics and curious onlookers to his weekly Sunday blessings and Wednesday audiences in St. Peter’s square—something that hasn’t been seen in Rome since the early days of John Paul II. He even has his own fanzine and smartphone app.

But just as the Pope’s pedestrian popularity grows, bolstered no doubt by a savvy public relations move from within the Vatican to get the ‘good news’ message out to the mainstream press, there are a growing number of dissident voices from deep within the Catholic community who aren’t exactly impressed with the so-called “Francis effect” on the church as a whole. …

Another perceived weak spot in the Francis papacy for many is his kid-glove approach to the horrific child sex-abuse scandal the church is still dealing with. He has not yet met publicly with any victims of priest abuse like his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI did, and he has persistently avoided making a public apology as Pope. In December, he did announce the formation of a special commission to deal with the issue of predatory priests and child sex-abuse cases, but he has yet to name the commission, meaning that their work has not yet begun. That is especially painful to victims of priest abuse like David Clohessy, head of SNAP—Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. Clohessy says that Francis needs to immediately take tangible steps to remove predatory priests from the parishes and to punish bishops who continue to cover up their offenses.

“Policies, pledges, apologies, meetings with victims won’t work. they’ve all been said and done before. They are public relations placebos,” Clohessy told The Daily Beast. “They don’t safeguard a single child, expose a single predator or deter a single cover up. Symbolic moves are actually hurtful because they cause complacency instead of vigilance and give people false hope that real reform will follow, when it hasn’t followed and isn’t following.”

Clohessy isn’t holding out hope that the Pope’s abuse commission will make any difference. “A ‘carrot only’approach won’t work and he knows it. He must find the courage to wield a “stick” and he shows little or no sign of being strong and brave enough to do this.”

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

Ricardo Rodriguez responds to Rene Guerra’s request to appoint him in Irene Garza case

TEXAS
Valley Central

[with video]

by Ashly Custer
Posted: 03.10.2014

District Attorney Elect Ricardo Rodriguez responded in a written letter to Rene Guerra’s request to appoint him as the special prosecutor in the Irene Garza case that he has decided to turn down the offer.

Ricardo Rodriguez personally delivered his written response to the Hidalgo County District Attorney’s office Monday afternoon.

The letter explains that he will revisit the Irene Garza case, but not until he officially takes office in January 2015.

Relatives of Irene Garza said they wholeheartedly support Rodriguez’s decision to do so.

“Actually, at first, I thought it was a joke,” said Irene Garza’s cousin Noemi Siegler.

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

After Seeing His Family Crumble, Vindicated Whistle-Blower Has Little to Smile About

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By MICHAEL POWELL
March 10, 2014

To walk the streets free of the shadow of indictment, to hear a Brooklyn prosecutor last Friday describe the extortion case against him as a tree rotted through, Samuel Kellner might be expected to speak of vindication and hope.

Except this voluble, gray-bearded man cannot summon happiness.

Five years ago, Mr. Kellner, a 52-year-old Hasidic Jew, chose to step off a cultural cliff. He spoke out about the sexual abuse of his 16-year-old son by a prominent Hasidic cantor. And he helped a police detective ferret out other victims of this cantor, whose connections ran to the most powerful reaches of the Satmar community.

Retribution became daily fare for Mr. Kellner. His rabbi denounced him as a traitor. Yeshivas locked out his sons. He pawned his silverware.

Then the former Brooklyn district attorney, Charles J. Hynes, who had proved a most considerate ally of Hasidic leaders, drove a stake into Mr. Kellner’s heart. After gaining a conviction of the cantor, Baruch Lebovits, Brooklyn prosecutors turned around and indicted Mr. Kellner. Basing their case on the questionable testimony of a prominent Satmar supporter of the cantor, they accused Mr. Kellner of trying to shake down Mr. Lebovits.

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.

“Missbrauchsskandal war der Tiefpunkt”

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Rundschau

[Summary: Archbishop Robert Zollitsch talks about the successes and failures of his tenure as chairman of the German Bishops’ Conference. A number of controversial issues and scandals fell during his tenure, including sexual abuse. He said that the cases of sexual abuse of minors were a deep abyss into which the bishops had to look.]

Von JOACHIM FRANK

Erzbischof Robert Zollitsch spricht im Interview über Erfolge und Misserfolge seiner Amtszeit als Vorsitzender der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz. Tebartz-van Elst habe sich nicht zur Frühjahrsvollversammlung angemeldet, erzählt er. Seine Teilnahme wäre aber offiziell möglich.

Herr Erzbischof, die Liste der Reizthemen und Skandale, die in Ihre Amtszeit fielen, ist lang: sexueller Missbrauch, Vorwürfe Bischof Mixa, Kirchenfinanzen, die Limburger Bischofsresidenz, Kritik an Papst Benedikt zum Beispiel wegen der Piusbrüder und des Holocaust-Leugners Williamson… Wie sehr haben Sie mit dem Tag gehadert, an dem Ihre Mitbrüder Sie zum Vorsitzenden der Bischofskonferenz und damit zu Gesicht und Stimme des deutschen Episkopats gewählt haben?

Ich habe mir dieses Amt vor sechs Jahren nicht gesucht, sondern wurde von zahlreichen Mitbrüdern gedrängt, die Aufgabe des Vorsitzenden nicht abzulehnen. Vielleicht es gut, dass man im Vorfeld nicht weiß, was auf einem zukommt. Denn es gab zweifellos viele Probleme und Krisen, mehr als in den Jahren zuvor. Und diesen Herausforderungen, gilt es sich zu stellen, um nicht überrollt zu werden. Das kostet Kraft, ist aber um des Evangeliums willen notwendig. Gott sei Dank gab es auch viel Positives, das nicht schlagzeilenträchtig ist, das aber das Leben der Kirche ausmacht. Ich erinnere mich an zahlreiche Begegnungen und bin dankbar zu wissen, wie viele Gläubige mich durch ihr Vertrauen und Ihr Gebet mitgetragen haben. Besonders in Erinnerung sind mir natürlich der Besuch von Papst Benedikt 2011 und der Katholikentag in Mannheim 2012.

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

Bedenken nach Antwort der Kirche zu Kindsmissbrauch

SCHWEIZ
swissinfo

[Summary: Victims of sexual abuse by priests in Switzerland said the church is not doing enough to combat sexual assault. The new prevention guidelines of the Swiss Catholic Church, which were adopted as a result of the worldwide scandal, cannot eliminate the abuse, they said. Gerard Falcioni of Bramois asked where are the Swiss priests accused of abuse. He was abused at age 5 from a priest in the region. He was one of the few victims who have testified in public about their own abuse. According to data from the Swiss Episcopal Conference reported by 2009-2012 a total of 193 victims have reported abuse in Swiss dioceses since 1960. The abuse was perpetrated by 172 priests and laity.]

Von Simon Bradley, swissinfo.ch
11. März 2014

Die Opfer sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Priester in der Schweiz kritisieren, dass nicht genug unternommen werde, um gegen Übergriffe vorzugehen. Die neuen Präventionsrichtlinien der Katholischen Kirche der Schweiz, die infolge des weltweiten Skandals erlassen wurden, können die Bedenken nicht beseitigen.

“Wo sind all die Schweizer Priester, die angeklagt wurden”, fragt Gérard Falcioni, Skilehrer und Hirte aus dem Dorf Bramois im Kanton Wallis.

Er war im Alter von fünf Jahren selber von einem Priester in der Region missbraucht worden. Gérard Falcioni gehört zu den wenigen Opfern, die in der Öffentlichkeit über ihre eigene Misshandlung ausgesagt und die Kirche angeklagt haben. Über seine Geschichte hat er zwei Bücher geschrieben und vielen Medien Auskunft gegeben. Aber jetzt hat er genug.

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.

Catholic Church litigation in Ellis case was ‘runaway train’

AUSTRALIA
ABC – The World Today

ELEANOR HALL: Let’s go now to the latest from the child abuse Royal Commission, which today heard intriguing details about how the Sydney Archbishop George Pell handled the complaint of child sexual abuse by John Ellis.

John Ellis attempted to sue the Church a decade ago but, in what’s become known as the Ellis Defence, the court found that the Church could not be sued.

The Royal Commission has now been told that the Church’s lawyers may have not given the full facts of the case to George Pell and that this may have contributed to the long, vigorous and expensive legal action.

Our correspondent Emily Bourke has been monitoring the hearings in Sydney and she joins us now.

Emily, John Ellis was giving evidence again today. What did he say about how this litigation process affected him?

EMILY BOURKE: Well, John Ellis came forward to the Church in 2002 but the wheels of the Towards Healing process moved very slowly in this case and there had been scathing internal reviews about what actually occurred as this process unfolded.

In the end, there was no resolution from Towards Healing and so civil action commenced in earnest in 2004. But by 2007 all legal avenues had been exhausted. The claim was rejected and Mr Ellis was now about to be pursued for the hefty legal costs incurred by the Church.

He told the inquiry today that this set of circumstances had a deep psychological impact and he slipped into a severe depression.

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Catholic Church head George Pell told victim John Ellis he had been through ‘legal abuse’, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Joanna Woodburn

A victim of child sexual abuse by a Catholic priest was told by Cardinal George Pell that he had also suffered “legal abuse” in his attempts to seek justice, a royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining allegations made by John Ellis, who failed in his attempt to sue the Catholic Church in 2007.

Mr Ellis was abused by Father Aidan Duggan in Sydney between 1974 and 1979.

Giving evidence to the royal commission, Mr Ellis recalled a meeting with the former Archbishop of Sydney and Australia’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal Pell, in February 2009.

Mr Ellis said he was surprised that Cardinal Pell had believed Mr Ellis was seeking millions of dollars, which would need to be defended, rather than an ex-gratia payment of $100,000.

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Survivor of child sex abuse says he felt ‘beset’ by church’s legal response

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Tuesday 11 March 2014

A survivor of child sexual abuse at the hands of a Catholic priest has told a royal commission he felt “beset” by the church’s response to his litigation.

The royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse has also heard the former head of the church’s NSW Professional Standards Office delayed appointing an independent assessor to examine the abuse claims despite church protocols stating otherwise.

The commission is examining the treatment of John Ellis, who unsuccessfully pursued civil litigation against the church and Sydney archbishop Cardinal Pell for the abuse he suffered at the hands of Bass Hill priest Father Aidan Duggan as an altar boy.

During a meeting in February 2009 with Pell and John Usher, chancellor of the Catholic archdiocese of Sydney, Ellis said Pell used the term “legal abuse” to describe the treatment of his litigation.

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Seeking peace and keeping the faith

UNITED STATES
Toledo Blade

BY KEITH C. BURRIS
COLUMNIST FOR THE BLADE

Thomas Gumbleton is 84. Officially, he is the “emeritus,” auxiliary bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Detroit. He is to be addressed as “the most reverend.” But that’s not the kind of bishop this man is. Tom Gumbleton is a soft-spoken renegade. Like St. Paul, he shuns respectability and walks among the outcasts.

He is the only American bishop to be arrested for protesting the war in Iraq.

He founded Pax Christi, the Christian peace group that has long taken “thou shalt not kill” literally.

Bishop Gumbleton remembers when Pope Paul VI went to the United Nations and said: “No more war.” “Americans,” the bishop told me, “still call World War II ‘the good war.’” But Pope Paul VI called the bombings of civilians in Japan and Germany “butchery.” Pope Paul said our example should be Gandhi.

Nonviolence works, said Bishop Gumbleton, sitting across from me in his small office in Detroit. Skilled linguists and area scholars at the State Department also would help.

Bishop Gumbleton recalls that, during the Iran hostage crisis, there were only two people in the U.S. embassy who knew Farsi. He discovered that when he went to Iran with other U.S. clergymen, one month after the hostages were taken in 1979. Together they saw all but two of the 52 hostages, including the only two women. In groups of three or four the bishop met hostages and celebrated Mass with them. The first group was three Catholics and a Jew. The two women were Lutheran and Episcopalian. He held a Eucharist with them too. The bishop is still in touch with some of the hostages today.

Bishop Gumbleton is also the only American bishop to speak out on the Church’s sex abuse scandals. He says that confession and forgiveness are key, but so is truth, treatment, and justice. He came to Columbus a few years ago to testify before the legislature — to urge that a “window” be opened in the statute of limitations so that some abusers who escaped the law might be brought before it. He said the church’s methods had not brought healing.

And he said something else: It happened to me.

He had been assaulted by a priest. He said he didn’t want to dramatize it — that when it happened he was 15 and able to defend himself. But he hoped that legislators would listen to one who had been victimized.

They listened but did not act.

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John Doe suing Catholic Diocese of Yakima for $3 million

WASHINGTON
KIMA

[with video]

By Natalie Eucce Published: Mar 10, 2014

YAKIMA COUNTY, Wash.– A John Doe against a would-be priest. The trial against the Catholic Diocese of Yakima started today. It’s the first case of its kind to go to trial. The case stems from an alleged child rape.

Foster kid, high school student, and athlete. A man known only as John Doe was once all those things when he says he was raped by a deacon candidate. The alleged victim is suing the diocese for $3 million.

The man says Aaron Ramirez was working for Resurrection Parish in Zillah when he raped the then 17-year-old.

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Gazette opinion: The brave steps ahead

MONTANA
Billings Gazette

Christians last week marked the beginning of Lent, a time for spiritual reflection and contemplating a broken world in need of salvation.

As Lent begins, the two Montana Roman Catholic dioceses proceed at different points with lawsuits which allege sexual abuse and cover-up by authorities years ago. It’s purely coincidental that news of these lawsuits and a bankruptcy by the Diocese of Helena come on the heels of Lent.

And yet coincidence is indeed beautiful in its timing.

Not enough can be written and not enough damning words can be said about the alleged abuse that took place in the Roman Catholic Church, where priests and institutions may have permitted sexual predators license to prey upon the most vulnerable in the church, the children. Of all the things Jesus made clear in the New Testament, few words were more pointed or unequivocal than those he spoke against those who would harm children.

Yet, this is not an editorial adding our condemnation for a stiff-necked church unwilling to admit its role in unspeakable crimes. It wasn’t just institutional indifference, it went beyond that.

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Some US dioceses report results of questionnaire

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael O’Loughlin | Mar. 11, 2014

Lay Catholics who were given the chance to respond to a Vatican questionnaire on family-related issues greeted the opportunity with relish, but it may be that laypeople in just over a third of the nearly 200 Catholic dioceses in the U.S. were given that opportunity.

NCR scoured websites and publications of U.S. dioceses looking for signs of how dioceses invited Catholics to respond to Pope Francis’s October 2013 request to distribute “immediately” and “as widely as possible” a questionnaire on issues such as contraception, same-sex marriage, and divorce. The results from dioceses around the world will become input for the Synod of Bishops on the family in Rome in October.

NCR found 78 dioceses with clear, easily accessible information about what the survey was and how Catholics could participate, either through online surveys, direct consultations (a bishop in Alaska hosted a town hall meeting) or parish input. Some bishops announced they would be consulting priest councils or other diocesan structures to gather responses to the questionnaire.

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Pell said church action was legal abuse: victim

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 11, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell told a victim of child sex abuse by a Catholic priest that his treatment at the hands of church lawyers was “legal abuse”, despite the court case effectively preventing other victims taking action against the church

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George Pell was ‘out of the loop’ on decision-making in key abuse case: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 11, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell was “completely out of the loop” during the running of a highly controversial legal case against him, which effectively established that the Catholic Church in Australia cannot be sued for child sex abuse committed by a priest.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard the former Archbishop of Sydney was given misleading information about the case, which was brought by a former Sydney altar boy, John Ellis.

The case was ultimately decided by the NSW Court of Appeal in 2007, which found that neither the archbishop nor the trustees of the archdiocese could be sued over abuse committed by a priest.

During a subsequent private meeting in 2009, Cardinal Pell apologised to Mr Ellis for the way the case was handled, saying he did not know Mr Ellis had previously offered to settle for a fraction of the amount the archdiocese ultimately spent on the case.

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Church offered abuse victim a deal

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Lawyers acting for the Catholic Church and Cardinal George Pell offered to waive $500,000 in legal costs if a survivor of child sexual abuse agreed not to appeal against a court ruling.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the experiences of John Ellis, who unsuccessfully pursued civil litigation against the church and Sydney Archbishop Cardinal Pell for the abuse he suffered an altar boy.

Mr Ellis told the commission he understood the church had accepted as fact his abuse at the hands of Father Aidan Duggan at Christ the King’s Church in Bass Hill, Sydney from 1974 to 1979.

But when the matter reached court, church lawyers questioned his honesty.

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In priest’s sex-abuse case, still no verdict

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

A JURY IS SET to return today for a fourth day of deliberations in a Philadelphia priest’s sexual-assault trial.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick is accused of molesting a 10-year-old altar boy in a rectory bedroom in 1997.

The jury deliberated for the day yesterday without reaching a verdict on the five counts.

McCormick, 57, is the latest in a string of Philadelphia priests charged with child sexual assault. City prosecutors have been investigating the Roman Catholic church’s handling of abuse complaints since 2002.

McCormick denies molesting anyone during his 30-year church career. He concedes that he was twice reprimanded by the Archdiocese for his behavior around children.

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Has ‘rock star’ Pope Francis really launched a revolution?

CANADA
CBC

By Alison Smith, CBC News Posted: Mar 11, 2014

From the moment he stepped onto the Vatican balcony high above St. Peter’s Square, it was clear there was something different about him.

He wore a plain white robe, a simple cross and offered a casual “Good evening.”

“Buona sera,” he said, and the crowd roared its approval.

In the year since Jorge Mario Bergoglio became Pope Francis, that roar has hardly diminished.

“Rock star Pope takes the world by storm,” says longtime Vatican journalist John Allen. “That’s become the dominant narrative.”

As Allen, who writes for the Boston Globe and works regularly in Rome, points out, the story of the Catholic Church a year ago was scandal — pedophile priests, Vatican bank corruption and gay conspiracies in the Vatican.

Those stories haven’t gone away, Allen say, but Pope Francis now dominates headlines about the Catholic Church. …

But on perhaps the most important issue, the one that has struck at the very heart of the church’s moral authority, Pope Francis has yet to take significant steps.

Late last year, Francis announced a special commission would be set up to deal with the sexual abuse of children by priests. No one has been named to that commission, nor has its mandate been established.

‘Why me?’

Brenda Brunelle, who lives in Windsor, Ont., was abused by a local priest when she was just 13 years old.

A devoted Catholic, she lived with the shame and anger all of her adult life.

“All I wanted to know was: ‘Why me?’ ” she says.

When finally as a grown woman she asked for a meeting with her abuser to help her heal, she was rebuffed.

“And the last statement made to me,” she says, “was that when this particular priest dies, the Vicar General will walk with me to his graveside and assist me with closure at that time.”

That was five years ago and Brunelle hasn’t been back to church since. Closure for her now, she says can only come with real reform.

Children in the church to this day, she argues, are not safe.

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Archdiocese to end tuition aid to children of abuse victims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JEREMY ROEBUCK, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
POSTED: Tuesday, March 11, 2014

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia will end its eight-year practice of providing parochial school tuition to children of clergy sex-abuse victims at the end of this school year, citing low participation and a desire to refocus its spending on efforts that directly aid the abused.

The news, quietly announced to participants last spring, has drawn the ire of beneficiaries who count the decision as yet another betrayal by church officials. And it has come as a surprise to people who were potentially eligible for help but say they were never told about the program.

“It was the least they could do for me,” said Matthew Woodruff, 49, who testified before a Philadelphia jury in 2012 about his childhood abuse at the hands of his parish priest in Bucks County. “I never got a nickel or an apology for what happened to me as a kid.”

Since 2010, Woodruff’s 15-year-old son and daughter have attended parochial schools in Levittown, most recently Conwell-Egan Catholic High School – a school he says he never could have afforded without the tuition assistance offered to victims.

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Trial begins in sex-abuse claim against Yakima diocese

WASHINGTON
Yakima Herald-Republic

By Donald W. Meyers / Yakima Herald-Republic
dmeyers@yakimaherald.com

YAKIMA, Wash. — Missing records, disputed accounts of an event 15 years ago and its aftereffects all surfaced Monday on the opening day of hearings in a $3 million lawsuit by a man who said he was raped by a deacon with the Catholic Diocese of Yakima.

In opening arguments in U.S. District Court, attorney Bryan D. Smith said his client had been a teenager with a promising academic and athletic future before reporting he’d been raped by church deacon Aaron Ramirez in a trailer on the grounds of Zillah’s Resurrection Catholic Church.

Smith said the man, identified in court records as John Doe, was 17 years old and had overcome childhood physical and sexual abuse, was a star wrestler, a cross-country runner and second in command of his high school’s junior ROTC.

But Smith said the 1999 incident started a downward spiral into addiction as the young man lost interest in school and athletics, became suicidal and was later discharged from Marine Corps boot camp for medical reasons.

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March 10, 2014

Nuns Pray While Judge Reads Sex Charges

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

MONDAY, MARCH 10, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

At 10:15 a.m. this morning in Courtroom 1102, Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright read the details of the sex crimes that Father Andrew McCormick is charged with.

The jury, beginning their second day of deliberations, had asked the judge for a read back on the charges.

Judge Bright began with involuntary deviate sexual intercourse, which in this case involved oral sex with a minor. “The slightest degree of penetration is sufficient,” the judge told the jury. She went on for ten minutes to detail the elements of that crime, along with four other charges against the priest: sexual assault, endangering the welfare of a child, indecent assault of a child, and corrupting the morals of a minor.

In the second row of the courtroom, four nuns in full habits weren’t listening to the gory details. Instead, they had their heads bowed, they held their rosary beads while they silently prayed for “Father Andy.”

“It’s atrocious to have it associated with him,” Sister Jacinta Miryam Hanley said of the sex crimes that Father Andy is accused of. The alleged victim in this case is a former 10-year-old altar boy who said that 17 years ago, Father Andy assaulted him in the rectory of St. John Cantius Church in Bridesburg.

When the jury left the courtroom to deliberate, the nuns continued their prayer vigil outside in the hallway with Father Andy on the 11th floor of the Criminal Justice Center. The nuns, who were saying the rosary, were joined by other supporters of the priest.

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Fr Eugene Boland resumes ministry after abuse acquittal

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

A priest who was acquitted in 2012 of sexual assault charges against a teenage girl is to return to ministry in the Diocese of Derry.

Fr Eugene Boland, a parish priest in Cappagh, County Tyrone, stepped aside four years ago while the allegations were investigated.

The administrator of the diocese said both the legal proceedings and Church processes have now been completed.

Fr Boland will resume his duties during a Mass in his parish on Saturday night.

Fr Francis Bradley, Diocesan Administrator of the Diocese of Derry, said: “I am glad the civil and canonical processes in respect of Fr Eugene Boland have drawn to a close.

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Ricardo Rodriguez declines Rene Guerra’s appointment as special prosecutor

TEXAS
The Monitor

Posted: Monday, March 10, 2014
Jacob Fischler | The Monitor

EDINBURG — District Attorney-elect Ricardo Rodriguez today declined an appointment by the current occupant of the office to act as special prosecutor on the 54-year-old Irene Garza murder case.

In a three-paragraph letter he delivered personally to Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra’s office just before 2:30 p.m., Rodriguez rebuffed the appointment Guerra sent him Friday. In the letter, Rodriguez took issue with Guerra’s public and private conduct since election night and questioned his motives and authority to make the appointment.

“If however you are offering to hire me under your administration, I decline. I do not wish to work for you,” he wrote.

The unsolved case of the 1960 murder of Garza — a 25-year-old McAllen beauty queen — murder resurfaced during the campaign between Rodriguez and Guerra, which ended with Rodriguez winning 64 percent of the countywide vote to 36 percent for Guerra.

The case garnered more attention in the campaign’s closing weeks when Garza’s relatives and others at campaign events publicly questioned Guerra’s handling of the 2004 reopening of the case. CBS ran an hour-long 48 Hours episode profiling the case — that Guerra said portrayed him unfavorably — two days before Election Day. CNN also ran an hour-long show about the case in May.

But it is unclear how much the case affected the race’s outcome, as the early voting — that concluded before the 48 Hours episode ran — broke heavily for Rodriguez.

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Pastor, Dr. Ketner charged with attempted rape

KANSAS
Dodge City Daily Globe

By Nancy Calderon
Dodge City Daily Globe
Posted Mar. 7, 2014

DODGE CITY
Longtime Ford County resident and Pastor Dr. Jerrold W. Ketner, 79, was arrested Friday, March 7, in connection with rape allegations.

Dr. Ketner is being charged with seven counts:

Count one, rape, with a potential jail sentence of up to 653 months; count two, attempted criminal sodomy, with a potential jail sentence of up to 247 months; count three, aggravated sexual battery, with a potential jail sentence of up to 136 months; count four, attempted rape, with a potential jail sentence of up to 247 months; count five, attempted criminal sodomy, with a potential jail sentence of up to 247 months; count six, aggravated criminal sexual battery, with a potential jail sentence of up to 136 months and count seven, blackmail, with a potential jail sentence of up to 34 months.

According to the Dodge City Police Department the sexual assault investigation involving a 33 year-old female victim began at noon on March 6.

Dr. Ketner’s $100,000 bond was modified to a $10,000 cash bond at his first appearance via video Friday, March 7, in Ford County District Court.

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Elderly Kansas pastor arrested on rape, sexual assault charges

KANSAS
The Raw Story

By Tom Boggioni
Monday, March 10, 2014

A longtime Dodge City resident and pastor, aged 79, was arrested Friday, in connection with multiple rape and sexual assault allegations.

According to the Dodge Globe, Pastor Dr. Jerrold W. Ketner has been charged with seven counts of rape and sexual assault in the case, involving a 33 year-old female victim.

Charges against the pastor include: rape, two counts of attempted criminal sodomy, two counts of aggravated sexual battery, attempted rape, and one count of blackmail.

The Dodge City Police Department opened the sexual assault investigation on the pastor of New Hope on the Plains church on March 6.

On March 7, Ketner’s $100,000 bond was modified to a $10,000 cash bond in Ford County District Court with District Judge Ann L. Dixon ordering the defendant to be placed under immediate house arrest if he should post bond

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RNC confirms investigation into member of parish

CANADA
The Telegram

The RNC confirmed today it has received a complaint regarding a member of a parish in St. John’s.

The RNC’s criminal investigation division is conducting an investigation, however, police are unable to discuss any evidence gathered at this point.

The name of the person of interest or suspect will be withheld and will only be released if charges are laid.

While the RNC would not name a person of interest, or the parish, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. John’s announced Saturday it has removed Father Wayne Dohey from his position as parish priest of St. Patrick’s Parish.

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No verdict in priest’s sex-assault trial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

A Philadelphia Common Pleas Court jury will resume deliberations Tuesday in the sex-assault trial of Rev. Andrew McCormick, a Roman Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting a 10-year-old altar boy at a Northeast church in 1997.

The jury of nine women and three men ended a second full day of deliberations Monday without a verdict. The jurors began their day having Judge Gwendolyn N. Bright reinstruct them in the law.

McCormick, 57, is charged in five counts involving sexual assault, child endangerment, and corrupting minors in an incident that allegedly occurred when McCormick was a priest at St. John Cantius Church in Bridesburg.

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Parish Priest returns to mass following abuse acquittal

NORTHERN IRELAND
RTE News

A Tyrone-based parish priest who was acquitted of indecent assault is to return to his role in the ministry.

The Diocese of Derry has confirmed Father Eugene Boland will resume his ministry at a vigil mass this Saturday.

Fr Boland stepped aside on 15 August 2010 on foot of allegations made against him.

Two years later Fr Boland was found not guilty of five charges of indecent assault.

In a statement the diocese said legal proceedings in both the civil courts and in a Church canonical process have been completed.

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No verdict in Philly priest-abuse case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Westport News

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Philadelphia jury is set to return Tuesday for a fourth day of deliberations in a priest’s sexual-assault trial.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick is accused of molesting a 10-year-old altar boy in a rectory bedroom in 1997.

The jury deliberated for the day Monday without reaching a verdict on the five counts.

The 57-year-old McCormick is the latest in a string of Philadelphia priests charged with child sexual assault. City prosecutors have been investigating the Roman Catholic church’s handling of abuse complaints since 2002.

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Seattle church ‘benefits spiritually’ by cheating its way onto NYT bestseller list

WASHINGTON
The Raw Story

By Scott Kaufman
Monday, March 10, 2014

According to documents obtained by WORLD, a Seattle pastor spent nearly a quarter of a million dollars of his church’s money to put his book on The New York Times bestseller list.

The documents indicate that Mark Driscoll, the founding pastor of Mars Hill Church, and one of the church’s elders, John Sutton Turner, paid ResultSource Inc. (RSI) $210,000 “to conduct a bestseller campaign for your book, Real Marriage on the week of January 2, 2012. The bestseller campaign is intended to place Real Marriage on The New York Times bestseller list for the Advice How-To list.”

WORLD reporter Warren Cole Smith told KOMO News that “[t]he idea was to make it look like all of these books were spontaneously bought by individuals.”

Smith added that “[a]ll the major bestseller lists discourage the practice and they put safeguards in place to prevent people buying their way onto the New York Times bestseller list.”

The contract signed by church elder Turner — obtained by Warren Throckmorton — states that RSI needed the church “to provide a minimum of 90 different addresses for shipping the books to the author’s clients for the bulk purchases. The addresses need to be spread around the country with no more than 3 addresses per state [because] the NYT bestseller list requires a minimum of 90 geographically disperse addresses.”

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Assignment Record – Rev. Francis W. “Frank” Callan, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Francis W. “Frank” Callan was ordained a priest of the Oregon Province of the Society of Jesus in 1946. He was transferred often over the next three decades, from the diocese of Spokane to Great Falls, Boise City, Baker, Gallup, Tucson and Portland OR, working in parishes and schools. In the early 1970s he was assigned to a chaplaincy at Oregon State Hospital in Salem, where he stayed until his death in 1991. Callan’s name was included in 2011 on a list of members of the Jesuits’ Oregon Province identified as perpetrators of sexual abuse. The Province agreed to make the list public as part of a bankruptcy reorganization plan. Details of accusations against Callan were not provided.

Ordained: 1946
Died: April 19, 1991

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“Wir sind Kirche” spricht von Führungskrise

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutschlandfunk

[Summary: In Munster, the German Bishops’ Conference is seeking a successor for Robert Zollitsch. Christian Weisner of We Are Church said it’s a difficult talk because of credibility and disruption of the Catholic Church.]

In Münster sucht die Deutsche Bischofskonferenz einen Nachfolger für Robert Zollitsch. Der Neue habe die schwierige Aufgabe, Glaubwürdigkeit und Zerrissenheit der katholischen Kirche wiederherzustellen, sagte Christian Weisner von “Wir sind Kirche” im DLF.

Dirk-Oliver Heckmann: Robert Zollitsch, er war in den vergangenen sechs Jahren das Gesicht der katholischen Kirche in Deutschland. Es waren keine einfachen Jahre, fiel in seine Amtszeit die Aufdeckung des Missbrauchsskandals ebenso wie die Affäre um den Limburger Bischof Tebartz-van Elst. Die Glaubwürdigkeit der katholischen Kirche zumindest in Ansätzen wieder herzustellen, eine gewaltige Aufgabe für den Vorsitzenden der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz, und auch eine Aufgabe für seinen Nachfolger wird das sein, denn Robert Zollitsch scheidet mit 75 Jahren altersbedingt aus. In Münster auf der Frühjahrsvollversammlung der Bischofskonferenz, suchen die katholischen Würdenträger ab heute einen Nachfolger.

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Cardinal Dolan: Civil Unions Make Me “Uncomfortable” Too

NEW YORK
Gothamist

New York’s Archbishop and Cardinal Timothy Dolan gave an interview to Meet the Press yesterday that covered many of the changes in the Catholic Church seen since the beginning of Pope Francis’s papacy. He spent much of the interview batting back public perceptions of Francis’s radicalism, as well as being generally “uncomfortable” about the gays.

According to Dolan, Francis’s public statements (like his seeming indifference towards gay civil unions or his lefty first Apostolic Exhortation) are simply “part of his shrewd strategy…We’ve all had good teachers that almost tease us, you know, to say, ‘Oh, I wonder what he meant. I hope he comes back to that. I hope he clarifies, gets us asking questions and probing.’ I think that’s part of his strategy.” Calling the Pope a “bridge builder,” Dolan argued that there was no “bristling among the conservatives,” who he said were instead “rejoicing in…the evangelical fervor, the good interest in the life of the church.” …

In addition to civil unions, Dolan commented on the sex abuse crisis that has gripped the Church and deeply shaken its moral authority. In the same interview in which Pope Francis mused about civil unions, he called the Catholic church “the only public institution that has moved with transparency and responsibility” in regards to responding to sex abuse cases. Dolan added to this narrative of an innocent Church under attack, arguing that Catholics are angry “that bishops… have not reacted with the rigor and the scrupulous action that was necessary.” But Catholics are also angry that the church keeps “being picked on.”

Not to pick on Dolan, but the Irish government found that Catholic authorities were attempting to frustrate civil investigations into sex abuse in Ireland as recently as 2008. Additionally, Dolan was allegedly caught paying off abusers and shielding money from victims at his most recent posting in Milwaukee.

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Pope Francis Can’t Be The Savior of the Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Lauren Boyle

Within the last year, the Catholic Church has garnered a bounty of something it hasn’t seen in decades: positive attention.

The man responsible for the change in the Church’s public reputation is Pope Francis, a candid Jesuit who seems a world away from his traditionalist predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI. His effect on the Church seems so palpable that it has a name: the Francis effect — the idea that that he has brought change to the Church and, by doing so, can call the world’s wayward Catholics back to Mass in droves.

Recently, the Pew Research Center conducted a poll that revealed the promise — and the shortcomings — of the Francis effect. According to the poll, over 80 percent of Catholics view him as the leader in a favorable change for the Church, a new direction for a centuries-old institution not exactly notorious for changing its mind on anything. Francis’ popularity ratings hearken back to the days of Pope John Paul II, whose emphasis on interfaith dialogue and the importance of young Catholics won huge approval from believers and non-believers alike.

However, the results of the poll also suggested that regular Mass attendance, volunteer service and attendance at the sacrament of Reconciliation have not significantly increased since Pope Francis stepped into the Vatican. Now, people are asking, “Why?”

The answer is because one man, no matter how revolutionary or wonderful, cannot save a Church damaged by decades of indiscretion and abuse in one year.

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Editorial: Child protection should be pope’s top priority

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Daily Times

As Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput prepares to take his delegation of corporate executives to the Vatican March 24 to prepare for the World Meeting of Families in September 2015 in the City of Brotherly Love, there is a crucial item that should be included on his agenda.

He should ensure that the issue of children’s safety is a high priority when planning this international event with Pope Francis.

The meeting, designed to “emphasize the good news of the family and highlight its intrinsic value to the good of society,” would be the ideal time for the pontiff to publicly condemn clerical sexual abuse and its deleterious effects on children — and, subsequently, their families.

It would be the perfect occasion for the Holy Father to define decisive actions to bring to justice any pedophiles still among church ranks and make accountable their superiors who have permitted them continued access to children.

After decades of the hierarchy protecting pedophile priests, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops was forced to take a stand in 2002 when the molestation conviction of a Boston priest opened a Pandora’s Box of clerical sexual abuse allegations across the country. The bishops formulated a policy requiring all reports of suspected child abuse within the U.S. church community be turned over to civil authorities. Since then the abuse scandal has exploded worldwide.

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Manning Priest charged with sexual abuse and interference

CANADA
Beacon News

A 59-year old Catholic Priest who was practising in the Manning area in 2013, is facing sex-related charges after a minor reported to police he was sexually assaulted by the accused.

Abraham Azhakathu has been charged with sexual assault and sexual interference. He was arrested on Friday, Mar. 8 and released from police custody late Saturday after a judicial interim release hearing.

Cpl. Carol McKinley of the RCMP says “The charges are as a result of a minor reporting the assaults that occurred during 2013, to RCMP in Manning”. She adds that as the matter is now before the courts, no further information will be released.

“Protection of the minor’s identity is paramount, and therefore, age and sex will not be released”, says McKinley.

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Pa. jury hears legal charge again in priest case

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Reporter

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Philadelphia jury is reviewing legal instructions on the third day of deliberations in a priest’s sexual-assault trial.

The Rev. Andrew McCormick is accused of molesting a 10-year-old altar boy in a rectory bedroom in 1997.

McCormick is the latest in a string of Philadelphia priests charged with child sexual assault. City prosecutors have been investigating the Roman Catholic church’s handling of abuse complaints since 2002.

A change in Pennsylvania law has given them more time to pursue criminal charges in child-victim cases.

McCormick denies molesting anyone during his 30-year church career. He concedes that he was twice reprimanded by the archdiocese for his behavior around children.

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Rome- Pope picks 3 “troubling” choices for “economy” panel, SNAP says

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 10, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests( 314-862-7688 home, 314-503-0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

The Pope’s insensitivity to child sex abuse victims continues. He tapped three prelates for his Council on Economy whose words and deeds regarding clergy sex crimes and cover ups deeply trouble us.

[Vatican Information Service]

Two of them (Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Houston and Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera of Mexico City) have terrible histories of concealing child sex crimes.

[SNAP]

[SNAP]

A third (Cardinal Wilfrid Fox Napier of Durban, South Africa) said, less than a year ago, that sexual abuse by pedophiles was not a criminal condition (and was forced by the public uproar to apologize).

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Aussie- Victims blast Cardinal Pell’s comments as “disingenuous”

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 10, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

In a savvy public relations move before he testifies to a government panel, Cardinal George Pell now conveniently claims he’s OK with Catholic officials being sued when they ignore or conceal clergy sex crimes. He’s being disingenuous.

[The Guardian]

We disagree with those who claim Pell’s carefully-crafted statement “marked a significant shift.” Words don’t protect kids and help victims. Actions do. And only decisive action by Pell and his colleagues can even begin to un-do a tiny bit of the horrific harm they’ve caused hundreds.

And remember: no matter what Pell claims or promises or recommends about Australia, he’ll soon be in Italy. He will have no real ability to follow up on his words.

Pell also claims that Catholic officials are devising some “church mechanism” that would enable victims to sue the hierarchy. We are highly skeptical.

Victims don’t need yet another internal, biased secretive church process. Victims need Catholic officials to either stop fighting victims in the secular justice system or to at least fight fair.

Pell shamelessly tries to distance himself and his complicit colleagues from mean-spirited and selfish legal tactics by blaming attorneys: “Whatever position was taken by the lawyers during the litigation, or by lawyers or individuals within the archdiocese following the litigation. . .”

That’s deceitful. They lawyers didn’t make these decisions. Callous church officials like Pell did.

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Pope Francis image rightly tarnished by child abuse comments

CANADA
Beacon News

Markham Hislop | March 9, 2014

Recent remarks by Pope Francis are a throwback to conservative Pope Benedict XVI

Is Pope Francis the face of a new Catholic Church? Or is he just public relations window dressing on the same old medieval institution?

A new poll by Angus Reid Public Opinion suggests the pontiff’s everyman style, focus on poverty, and more modern comments on subjects like homosexuality and the afterlife have earned him a great deal of good will around the world.

According to Angus Reid, half of respondents to the survey of Canadians, Americans and Britons (Catholic and non-Catholic) view Pope Francis in a positive light, while 44 per cent have a neutral view. The rest (7%) view the Pontiff negatively.

And 58 per cent see the new Pope as having “an elevating effect on the Church.” The polling company’s release says that 36 per cent of respondents consider the strong public profile of Pope Francis as a good thing and 36 per cent say it makes the Church more interesting and relevant. Most chalk it up to his personal style (51%).

Not surprisingly, sexual abuse by Catholic clergy remains an area where respondents want to see Pope Francis take more action. Only a quarter of respondents say he’s done enough, though practicing Catholics are much more positive on this issue. Canada was the least forgiving country, America the most.

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WA- Clergy sex abuse trial starts today, victims respond

WASHINGTON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 10, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com)

A clergy sex abuse trial in the Diocese of Yakima has started today. We are grateful that this predator is facing criminal charges in a court of law.

[Yakima Herald-Republic]

We hope the victim finds courage during this difficult time and we are grateful that he found the strength to report his abuse. The predator, who was studying to become a priest, fled the Zillah church where the abuse took place after the abuse allegations were reported. He then fled to Mexico and has not been located.

We urge Bishop Joseph J. Tyson to seek out any other victims that may have been hurt by this priest in training and to disclose any information they have on him or his whereabouts.

It is always extremely worrisome when a predator flees justice and especially when he goes to a country that doesn’t have a strong system of child protection. We hope anyone who suffered, witnessed of suspects abuse or knows where this predator is will report to police.

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Sex abuse victims seek help from five bishops

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 10, 2014

For more information: David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Sex abuse victims seek help from five bishops
Convicted pedophile priest now runs a church
He faces three known accusers, all in Colorado
Cleric plead guilty to a felony & has been sued twice

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is asking Catholic bishops in five states to warn their flocks about a convicted predator priest who now heads a non-denominational North Carolina church.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, are asking bishops in Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, North Carolina and Colorado to “spread the word” about William Groves, an ex-priest who pled guilty to molesting a boy in 1990 in Pueblo, Colorado.

“Groves has worked in each of these dioceses and had access to children. We feel these bishops have a duty to use their resources to urge anyone who saw, suspected or suffered abuse by Groves to come forward and report to police,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, director of SNAP. “That kind of outreach is the best way to help parents protect their kids and help police catch pedophiles.”

[BishopAccountability.org]

Groves is now the paid president of the Spiritual Light Center (80 Heritage Hollow Drive, 828-369- 3065 – slcfranklin@ frontier.com) in Franklin, North Carolina. For years, Catholic officials claim they didn’t know where he was.

In November, Groves reportedly tried to persuade his church to start a children’s program. He has also claimed to be a drug and alcohol counselor. Reportedly, Groves left the priesthood after his second lawsuit involving a minor.

“Bishops hire, train and transfer priests, their responsibility should not end after priests leave the priesthood,” said Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, SNAP’s outreach director. “We hope these bishops will show real courage and compassion by working hard to find and help other victims who continue to suffer in silence, shame and self-blame.”

“Sadly, the culture of secrecy about and cover up of pedophile priests by Catholic officials is long-standing and on-going,” said David Fortwengler of Charlotte, a SNAP volunteer.

“No matter who heads a particular diocese, it will take continued and increased vigilance and skepticism and courage to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded” added Neil Evans of Asheville, another SNAP volunteer.

“It’s a travesty to see a man like this find his way back into a spiritual setting with the possibility of being in the company of the vulnerable,” said Charles L. Bailey, Jr. of Charlotte, a SNAP volunteer leader. “We have to stand up and be their advocates as they cannot. We know better and therefore have a duty to do better. We must protect all children and the vulnerable from predators, anything less is shameful.”

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TX- Cardinal named to new Vatican council, SNAP responds

TEXAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: March 10, 2014

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, national director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790 cell, 314 645 5915 home )

Houston’s Cardinal Daniel DiNardo is one of 15 individuals named to Pope Francis’ new “Council for the Economy.” We are disappointed in this choice.

[Catholic Culture]

For decades now, pedophile priests and complicit bishops have been – and still are – the biggest crisis the church has faced in modern times. And in this on-going scandal, DiNardo’s record – in Sioux City and in Houston – is terrible.

As long as the Vatican continues to promote bishops who covered up clergy child sexual abuse, Catholics can expect more kids to be hurt and more sex crimes to be committed.

In 2008, we named DiNardo as one of the worst Cardinals in the US. Our view of him has not changed.

[SNAP]

In November 2007, a victim reported having been sexually abused by Fr. Stephen Horn between 1989 and 1993. DiNardo found him credible and suspended Horn. The Cardinal, however, kept the allegation and his determination secret from parishioners, police and the public for two months, despite US bishops’ repeated pledges to act quickly and openly with credible sex abuse allegations. Finally, in mid-January, DiNardo disclosed his action. (The delay gave Horn, a credibly accused molester, ample opportunity to fabricate alibis, destroy evidence, intimidate victims, threaten witnesses, or even flee the country, as some pedophile priests have done.)

Part of DiNardo’s secrecy and delay occurred in the weeks between when the Pope announced that DiNardo would be named a Cardinal (October 2007) and when DiNardo was promoted amid much pageantry (November 24). Some Houston Catholics have speculated that DiNardo didn’t want the news of Horn’s crimes to ‘rain on [DiNardo’s] parade.’

At the time, we wrote DiNardo, urging him to explain and apologize for his secrecy and to visit parishes where Horn worked and emphatically beg victims and witnesses to come forward, get help and call the police. He has not responded to either the letter or the request. As best we can tell, he never did.

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Ireland- Two nun orders refuse to pay victims of the Magdalene laundries crisis, victims respond

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 10, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

Two of the four orders of nuns who ran the Magdalene laundries have refused to contribute to the financial redress for the victims. We are disappointed by this report.

[Irish Examiner]

To refuse to take responsibility for years of horrific abuse committed by these religious institutions is utterly disgraceful. These women are entitled to justice and receiving compensation from these orders that caused such pain, but it would only be scratching the surface of what is needed to begin to recover.

We urge these religious “charities” to reexamine their decisions. By blatantly dodging responsibility, they are preventing the at least 600 women from beginning to truly heal. We also encourage the state to consider revoking theses orders’ charitable status until they are willing to cooperate with the redress for the Magdalene Laundry victims. Refusing to contribute is the opposite of charitable; it is callous and selfish. Those responsible must be held accountable.

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Mexico- Complicit Cardinal named to new Vatican council, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: March 10, 2014

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, national director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790 cell, 314 645 5915 home )

Mexico City’s corrupt Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera is one of 15 individuals named to Pope Francis’ new “Council for the Economy.” We are disappointed in this choice.

[Catholic Culture]

For decades now, pedophile priests and complicit bishops have been – and still are – the biggest crisis the church has faced in modern times. And in this on-going scandal, Rivera Carrera’s record – in Mexico – is terrible.

As long as the Vatican continues to promote bishops who covered up clergy child sexual abuse, Catholics can expect more kids to be hurt and more sex crimes to be committed.

In 2013, we named Rivera Carrera as one of the dirty dozen for a papal choice. Our view of him has not changed.

[SNAP]

In 2007, Rivera Carrara worked to prevent a prolific predator priest from facing justice. He was accused of concealing the dreadful child sex crimes of Fr. Nicholas Aguilar Rivera. The Cardinal did virtually nothing while Fr. Aguilar Rivera traveled between his native Mexico and the Los Angeles archdiocese, molesting kids in both places. Aguilar Rivera’s current whereabouts are unknown and is on Mexico’s most wanted criminal list.

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Complaint against priest Wayne Dohey filed with RNC

CANADA
CBC

A complaint against priest Wayne Dohey that triggered his suspension from St. Patrick’s parish in St. John’s has been filed with the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary.

An official with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. John’s said the complainant has also made a formal statement with the police. As a result, the archdiocese says, there is no need for church officials to do the same.

Archbishop Martin Currie is is revealing few details about why Dohey was removed last week from all ministerial duties at St. Patrick’s, pending an internal investigation into an unspecified complaint.

Currie is refusing to say what is alleged to have happened, but told CBC News the matter is being taken seriously.

“In the past, we were accused of not acting on complaints and following up on them. So the minute we received the complaint we have suspended Father from ministry and removed him from the parish here,” Currie said.

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Minister sentenced for child sex abuse

ALABAMA
Associated Baptist Press

By Bob Allen

A former children’s minister at an Alabama Baptist church was sentenced to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to child sex abuse March 7.

Jeffrey Dale Eddie, 41, longtime associate pastor for children and church administration at Highland Park Baptist Church in Muscle Shoals, Ala., entered pleas to 16 counts of sodomy, three counts of sexual abuse of a child under the age of 12 and one count of child pornography.

According to the Huntsville Times, prosecutors offered a plea bargain after talking with parents of victims.

“The main reason was to keep any of these children from having to testify and being named in the indictments,” said Colbert County District Attorney Bryce Graham. “Every victim and every parent is in agreement with this or we wouldn’t have done it. I hope this brings closure to these people and they can get back on with their lives.”

Eddie, arrested Feb. 4, had worked at Highland Park Baptist since 1998. Members called him “Brother Jeff.” He was originally taken into custody for child pornography found on his church-owned computer when the pastor investigated a report of him behaving suspiciously with a child.

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NY- Cardinal Dolan feels church is “picked on”; SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 10, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

On Meet the Press today, Cardinal Tim Dolan shamelessly whined that Catholics “are being picked on” about child sex crimes, trying to pretend that somehow, the church’s largely corrupt hierarchy is the real victim in the on-going, horrific Catholic clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis. Shame on him.

[NBC News]

[NBC News – Meet the Press]

He sounds childish when he basically says “Other people are wrongdoers too.” And of course he doesn’t cite, because he can’t cite, any other institution with such a long-standing, well-documented and continuing pattern of selfishness, recklessness, callousness and deceitfulness with children’s safety as the Catholic hierarchy.

“Why is it that Catholics are being picked on and singled out,” Dolan gripes. “This goes on in other areas of society, so yes I applaud the Popes comments regarding this.”

Of course, child molesters can be found in every occupation. But their supervisors elsewhere largely boot them out. But their Catholic supervisors largely ignore or hide their crimes and often transfer and protect them when child molesting clerics are caught.

Dolan also claimed that in recent years, the Catholic Church has become an example of handling child sex crimes well. He’s dead wrong. Right now, prosecutors want to extradite a Polish archbishop to face charges for molesting kids. Pope Francis and his staff are stopping this. Months ago, a United Nations panel asked for information about clergy sex crimes and cover ups, Pope Francis and his staff rebuffed them. Right now, Kansas City Bishop Robert Finn remains on the job and not a single one of the world’s 5,000 bishops has even found the courage to denounce him, even though he was found guilty in criminal court of withholding evidence of a priest’s child sex crimes from police.

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Archbishop mum on nature of Wayne Dohey suspension

CANADA
CBC

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. John’s is revealing few details about why priest Wayne Dohey was removed from all ministerial duties at a city parish.

Dohey has been suspended from St. Patrick’s parish near downtown St. John’s, pending an internal investigation into an unspecified complaint.

Archbishop Martin Currie is refusing to say what is alleged to have happened, but told CBC News the matter is being taken seriously.

“In the past, we were accused of not acting on complaints and following up on them. So the minute we received the complaint we have suspended Father from ministry and removed him from the parish here,” Currie said.

“I’m always very saddened when these things happen, when complaints are levelled against our clergy, no matter what the nature of it is.”

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 10 March 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:

– appointed Rev. Michael Fabian McCarthy as bishop of Rockhampton (area 415,000, population 402,654, Catholics 101,715, priests 43, religious 117), Australia. The bishop-elect was born in Toowoomba, Australia in 1950 and was ordained a priest in 1978. He has served in a number of pastoral roles, including president of the Pontifical Missionary Works and director of the Office for Migrants and Refugees; priest of the parishes of Laidley and Paradise; dean forane of South Coast; director for the permanent formation of the Clergy; rector of the provincial seminary of Brisbane; administrator of the parish of Wavell Heights; priest of the parish of Redcliffe City, and dean forane of Brisbane Northern Rivers. He is currently priest of the parish of Hendra, and episcopal vicar for the clergy.

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COMMENT OF THE DIRECTOR OF THE HOLY SEE PRESS OFFICE ON THE APPOINTMENT OF MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL FOR THE ECONOMY

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 8 March 2014 (VIS) – “Cardinals Cipriani Thorne, Napier, Rivera Carrera, Tong Hon, and Vallini, along with Cardinal Pell, new Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, were previously all members of the Council for the Study of Organizational and Economic Problems of the Holy See (Council of 15), which has ceased to exist. Cardinal Marx and Cardinal Pell, as is known, are both members of the Council of Cardinals for the reform of the Apostolic Constitution Pastor bonus, and for assisting the Holy Father in the governance of the universal Church (Council of 8).

“The relations between the Council and the Secretariat for the Economy will be defined by the statutes, and in any case the Council is to be understood as a body with its own decision-making authority, not merely an advisory organ of the Secretariat for the Economy.

“The members appointed to the Council are from various geographical areas, reflecting, as requested by the Motu proprio Fidelis dispensator et prudens, the universality of the Church. The laypersons, selected on the basis of their professional experience and capacity, will become voting members of a dicastery, one of the governing organs of the Roman Curia. The lay members will work on an entirely voluntary and pro bono basis, and shall receive compensation only for travel and lodgings in Rome.

“The constitution of the Council for the Economy is a key step towards the consolidation of the current management structures of the Holy See, with the aim of improving coordination and oversight of economic and administrative matters. The institutions of the Holy See related to these matters will depend on the Council. The latter will adopt practical measures used by other public organisations and shall aim at greater transparency and appropriate management.

“The Council will begin work immediately, and its first meeting is scheduled for May”.

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PRESS RELEASE ON THE APPOINTMENT OF MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL FOR THE ECONOMY

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 8 March 2014 (VIS) – Below is the full text of the press release issued this morning by the Holy See Press Office on the appointment of eight cardinals and seven expert laypersons as members of the Council for the Economy:

“Proceeding in the constitution of the new institutions created by the Motu proprio ‘Fidelis dispensator et prudens’ of 24 February 2014, the Holy Father has appointed eight cardinals and seven expert laypersons as members of the Council for the Economy, to serve for a five-year period:

– Cardinal Reinhard Marx, archbishop of Munich and Freising, Germany (coordinator);
– Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne, archbishop of Lima, Peru;
– Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, archbishop of Galveston-Houston, U.S.A.;
– Cardinal Wilfrid Fox Napier, archbishop of Durban, South Africa;
– Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard, archbishop of Bordeaux, France;
– Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera, archbishop of Mexico;
– Cardinal John Tong Hon, bishop of Hong Kong, China;
– Cardinal Agostino Vallini, vicar general of His Holiness for the diocese of Rome;
– Joseph F. X. Zahra, Malta (deputy coordinator);
– Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, France;
– John Kyle, Canada;
– Enrique Llano Cueto, Spain;
– Jochen Messemer, Germany;
– Francesco Vermiglio, Italy;
– George Yeo, Singapore.”

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Pope Francis’s lay finance expert vows ‘no more scandals’

VATICAN CITY
Boston Globe

By John L. Allen Jr. | GLOBE STAFF MARCH 10, 2014

A Maltese economist tapped by Pope Francis to help lead a new finance council says the pope’s reforms will ensure that the sort of scandal which erupted last summer, involving a Vatican accountant allegedly enmeshed in a John le Carré-esque plot to smuggle millions in cash, becomes a thing of the past.

“We’re building a system of controls that will ensure these scandals never happen again,” said Joseph F.X. Zahra, who spoke to the Globe in an exclusive March 8 interview.

Centering on a former Vatican official named Monsignor Nunzio Scarano, the smuggling scheme was only the latest financial scandal to engulf the Vatican, capping a period that also saw senior Vatican bank officials quit in the face of a criminal probe, and credit card services frozen at the Vatican over allegations of suspicious transactions.

Observers believe Francis’ efforts to promote financial glasnost are important not merely for the Vatican but to set a tone for the wider Catholic church, where accounting practices often remain informal and subject to abuse. A 2007 study by Villanova University, for instance, found that 85 percent of American dioceses had discovered instances of embezzlement within the previous five years.

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Exonerated Parish Priest returns to duty this weekend

NORTHERN IRELAND
Ulster Herald

THE Parish Priest of Cappagh, Fr Eugene Boland will return to church duties next week, following a “long and painful” battle to restore his reputation.

Fr Eugene was found not guilty of indecent assault last June, following an eight day trial.

The Killyclogher priest had stepped down from his role as PP in 2010 when the charges were made. Fr Boland had faced five charges of indecent assault on a 14-year-old girl in the Parochial House, Derry City, on unknown dates between June 1990 and June 1992.

He was acquitted of all charges. “It is with a sense of great joy and anticipation that I return to public ministry in my parish of Cappagh with my good name and standing in the Church fully restored,” he told the Tyrone Herald yesterday.

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Two popes to be canonised ‘did nothing’ about Maciel allegations

IRELAND
Irish Times

[RTE video]

Patsy McGarry

Sun, Mar 9, 2014

Three popes, including two who will be canonised at the end of next month, were aware of abuse allegations against Legionaries of Christ founder Fr Marcial Maciel Degollado, but did nothing about them.

It has also emerged that unsuccessful attempts were made to recruit the current papal nucio to Ireland Archbishop Charles Brown to the Legionaries. Later, he worked at the Vatican’s Congregatoin for the Doctrine of the Faith when Maciel was stood aside from ministry by Pope Benedict XVI in 2006 .

He was instructed to retire to a life of “prayer and penitence” and died at Jacksonville, Florida, on January 30th 2008, aged 87. Acccording to subsequent revelations Maciel sexually abused numerous underage seminarians and fathered at least three children with two women.

In 2010 the Vatican denounced himl for creating a “system of power” that enabled him to lead an “immoral” double life “devoid of scruples and authentic religious sentiment” and allowed him to abuse young boys for decades unchecked.

A Would You Believe special investigation on RTE One television, presented by Mick Peelo at 9.30 tonight, discloses that the popes who did not act against Maciel, while aware of allegations against him, included John XXIII, Paul VI, and John Paul II.

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Would You Believe?

IRELAND
RTE

[full video presentation]

The story of Fr Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionaries of Christ, who, with the help of a small army of Irish recruits, built a global empire and cult of personality within the Catholic Church under five successive Popes, despite the Vatican having credible evidence that he was a paedophile, a drug addict and a manipulative fraudster.

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Francis ineffective?

UNITED STATES
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho March 7, 2014

BREAKING: Francis has not reversed decades-long trends in Catholic practice over the course of one year.

A new Pew Research poll shows what many Catholics might expect: Francis is really popular among the faithful. And lots of them still don’t go to Mass very often. (Also Catholics still disagree with a bunch of church teachings.) Still, you’ll find plenty of news stories leading with the claim that for all the excitement the pope has generated, it seems not to have put more people in the pews. Catholics say they’re praying more–just not in church.

Aggregated Pew Research survey data reveal “no change in self-reported rates of Mass attendance among Catholic,” according to the new report. And “in the year since Francis became pope, 40 percent of U.S. Catholics say they attend Mass at least once a week, unchanged from the months immediately preceding the papal transition.”

That’s not surprising. Mass attendance has been holding steady for years. The Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, for example, estimates the percentage of Catholics who attend Mass weekly somewhere in the mid-20s. CARA’s data differ from Pew’s because it uses both phone surveys, in which people tend to over-report socially desirable behavior, and self-administered surveys–respondents fill out a form–which seem to suffer less from over-reporting. (Read all about it.)

Of course, there’s plenty of anecdotal evidence that Francis has energized Catholics, inspired the fallen away to return, and even made non-Catholics consider joining up. (Just yesterday, a Protestant friend told me he was thinking of crossing the Tiber because of Francis–and he’s an ordained minister.) But I don’t know many observers of the Catholic scene who expected Mass attendance to spike in the months following Francis’s election. Catholics don’t go to Sunday Mass for the pope. They go for several reasons: to worship God; to receive Communion; for spiritual edification; to listen to Scripture; to be with their prayer community; for a good homily (one hopes). Parishes succeed to the extent that they satisfy their members’ spiritual needs.

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SECOND PUBLIC HEARING INTO THE SALVATION ARMY TO COMMENCE MONDAY 24 MARCH 2014

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

The second public hearing into The Salvation Army by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will commence in Sydney on Monday, 24 March 2014.

The public hearing will inquire into the handling by The Salvation Army (Eastern Territory) of claims of child sexual abuse between 1993 and 2014. The hearing – the tenth since the Royal Commission was established – is scheduled to run for up to two weeks. Royal Commission CEO, Ms Janette Dines, says the scope and purpose of the public hearing is to inquire into:

1. The policies, practices and procedures of The Salvation Army (Eastern Territory), between 1993 and 2014, for responding to claims of child sexual abuse at children’s homes it operated.
2. The application and adequacy of these policies, practices and procedures between 1993 and 2014.
3. The experience of people who made complaints to The Salvation Army (Eastern Territory) between 1993 and 2014.
4. The policies, practices and procedures between 1990 and 2014 concerning the disciplining of officers of The Salvation Army (Eastern Territory) who were the subject of allegations of child sexual abuse.

Anyone who made a claim or complaint about child sexual abuse to The Salvation Army (Eastern Territory) between 1993 and 2014 is encouraged to come forward.

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Several New Minnesota Clergy Offender Names Released This Week

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

(St. Paul, MN) – The Crosier Province voluntarily released this week an updated list of priests and brothers with credible child sexual abuse allegations. The first list was previously disclosed in 2002 and Friday’s release included 11 new names of priests and brothers with one or more credible claims of child sex abuse. This is a promising step forward.

We encourage the Crosiers to take the next step and release their secret files on all 19 offenders. “The voluntary release of names is a positive step forward in child protection and abuse survivors, who are suffering in secrecy, silence and shame, now know they can come forward to get help, and that they are not alone,” stated attorney Jeff Anderson.

The information provided by the Crosiers this week shows that the credibly accused Crosiers served at various locations in several states, including Minnesota, Arizona, Indiana, Michigan and New York.

The list and assignment histories can be found at the link below:

http://www.crosier.org/images/stories/pdf/Crosier_List_Posting_March2014.pdf

Contact: Jeff Anderson: Mobile/612.817.8665
Mike Finnegan: Mobile/612.205.5531

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Announcement by Sir Anthony Hart, Chairman on 6th March 2014

NORTHERN IRELAND
Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry

“This morning I wish to announce that the closing date for applications to be made to the Acknowledgement Forum part of the Inquiry will be 1700 hours on Wednesday 30 April 2014. So far 308 people have spoken to the Forum since October 2012, and another 105 still have to speak to it in the coming months. Whilst the Inquiry is anxious that as many people as possible who wish to speak to the Forum will have the opportunity to do so, it is necessary to bring the Acknowledgment Forum application process to a close to facilitate the Forum informing the work of the Statutory Inquiry.

By 30 April the Acknowledgement Forum will have been accepting applications for over eighteen months, and the 30th April 2014 has been chosen as the latest possible date that will allow the Forum to see everyone who wishes to speak to it, and at the same time allow it enough time to prepare its report, because that report has then to be considered by the Statutory Inquiry when it prepares its report.

I want to emphasise that although applications to the Statutory Inquiry closed on 29 November 2013, those who apply to the Forum still have the opportunity to describe their experiences through the Forum, and as their evidence will be reflected in the report which the Forum makes to the Statutory Inquiry, in that way their evidence will still be taken into account by the Statutory Inquiry.

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St. John’s Catholic priest suspended

CANADA
The Telegram

Andrew Robinson
Published on March 10, 2014

A Roman Catholic priest has been removed from his position as parish priest and suspended from all ministerial duties while the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. John’s investigates an allegation of wrongdoing.

The church won’t say what the nature of that allegation is. In a statement released Saturday, the archdiocese did clarify that the complaint made against Father Wayne Dohey of St. Patrick’s Parish in St. John’s is not related to a court case involving the alleged embezzlement of parish funds.

Archbishop Martin Currie addressed the matter during mass Sunday at St. Patrick’s Church and spoke with reporters following the service.

“We received a complaint, and according to our protocol now, when we receive a complaint — because in the past we were accused of not acting on complaints and following up on them — so the minute we received a complaint, we have suspended Father (Dohey) from the ministry and removed him from the parish here, as the investigation is ongoing,” Currie said.

For now, the archdiocese is handling the investigation itself. Currie said he hopes to see the investigation conclude “quite quickly.”

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Doubt about child protection watchdog ‘damaging’: Martin

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Mon, Mar 10, 2014

The National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC) “is an extremely important instrument for the church in Ireland and any doubts that begin to emerge about its credibility and total integrity would be very, very damaging”, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin has said.

This was particularly so where its reviews or audits were concerned, he told The Irish Times .

The archbishop was commenting following the disclosure on Saturday that Ian Elliott, who retired as chief executive of the NBSC last June, had challenged findings of a child protection audit in Down and Connor diocese and was considering a legal action against its bishop.

Mr Elliott said its findings “do not reflect the findings from the fieldwork” he had conducted last May and he was “deeply concerned at attempts by the diocese to attribute that review [audit]” to him.

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Two Magdalene orders reaffirm compo refusal

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Monday, March 10, 2014

Two of the four Orders which ran the Magdalene laundries have reaffirmed their refusal to offer any financial contribution to the compensation fund for survivors.

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

More than a year after Taoiseach Enda Kenny offered a State apology to women incarcerated in Magdalene laundries, Justice Minister Alan Shatter wrote to the Orders a number of weeks ago for the fourth time about contributing to the redress scheme and confirmed that two of the Orders had responded stating they would not contribute any money towards compensating the women.

The redress scheme is expected to cost between €34m and €58m.

“I wrote to the religious congregations again on this matter several weeks ago following a statement made by the Holy See to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child in relation to the Magdalen laundries,” said Mr Shatter.

“I have received responses from two of the congregations advising that their position is unchanged and I am awaiting a response from the other two congregations.”

The Sisters of Mercy, Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of Refuge, the Good Shepherd Sisters, and the Sisters of Charity have all stated their refusal to contribute financially to the redress scheme on previous occasions.

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Archbishop Martin says it would be ‘disaster’ if church watchdog loses trust

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SARAH MACDONALD – UPDATED 10 MARCH 2014

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin says he is “very concerned” about fresh claims by the former CEO of the Catholic Church watchdog, Ian Elliot, on safeguarding children.

The Catholic Church’s most outspoken bishop on clerical abuse said: “If there is wrong on any side, it should be admitted.”

He told the Irish Independent that it would be “disastrous” if trust was lost in the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church (NBSCCCI).

Mr Elliott has told the Government that serious concerns he had about the handling of an abuse case were omitted from a later report.

He alleges the Diocese of Down and Connor blocked the release of information it held about the handling of the case of ex-priest Jim Donaghy, who was jailed for 10 years in 2012 for abusing two altar boys and a trainee priest.

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Pope Francis names members of new Council for the Economy, appoints Cardinal Marx as coordinator

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

Pope Francis has named the 15 members of the Council for the Economy, a new body whose creation he announced in his recent motu proprio Fidelis et Dispensator Prudens.

The Council for the Economy, according to the document, is entrusted with the task of “supervising economic management and supervising the structures and the administrative and financial activities of the dicasteries of the Roman Curia, of the institutions connected to the Holy See, and of Vatican City State.”

Pope Francis has named Cardinal Reinhard Marx of Munich and Freising as the coordinator of the Council. Cardinal Marx is among the eight prelates who serve on the Council of Cardinals, which assists the Pope in the governance of the universal Church and in the reform of the Roman Curia.

Other prelates who will serve on the Council for the Economy are Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston; Cardinal Wilfrid Fox Napier of Durban, South Africa; Cardinal Norberto Rivera Carrera of Mexico City; Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne of Lima; Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard of Bordeaux, France; Cardinal John Tong Hon of Hong Kong; and Cardinal Agostino Vallini, vicar general of Rome. The latter six prelates served on the 15-member Council of Cardinals for the Study of Economic and Administrative Problems of the Holy See, which no longer exists.

Pope Francis also appointed seven lay members of the new Council for the Economy:

Joseph F.X. Zahra, former director of the Central Bank of Malta

Jean-Baptiste de Franssu, former president of the European Fund and Asset Management Association

John F. Kyle, retired vice president of Imperial Oil Limited in Canada

Enrique Llano Cueto, an economist from the University of Madrid

Jochen Messemer, former partner of McKinsey & Company and board chairman of Ergo International Ltd.
Francesco Vermiglio, professor of business administration at the University of Messina

George Yeo, who has served as Singapore’s Minister of State for Finance

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Francis stumbles on sexual abuse

UNITED STATES
Spiritual Politics

Mark Silk | Mar 10, 2014

Rome, we’ve got a problem.

Pope Francis, politically the surest-footed pontiff in many a long century, stumbled pretty badly last week in discussing the crisis that has engulfed Roman Catholicism these past dozen years.

First, in a long interview in an Italian newspaper marking the first anniversary of his papacy, he displayed an ill-informed defensiveness about the church’s response to the revelations of sexual abuse. ”The Catholic church is maybe the only public institution to have moved with transparency and responsibility,” he said. “No one else has done more. Yet the church is the only one to be attacked.” Then, in a talk to some Italian priests, it seems he made a comment expressing sympathy for those “falsely accused” of abuse that the Vatican press office felt obliged to suppress.

Let us note 1) that the Catholic church has had a lot more to do in the sexual abuse department than other institutions; and 2) that other institutions have been a good deal more transparent, and have actually held responsible those guilty of covering up abuse. Moreover, as the folks in State College, Pa. (to give one example) know only too well, the church has hardly been the only institution to be (and this was hardly le mot juste) “attacked.” As for falsely accused priests, there haven’t been many of them.

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Church pursued abuse victim for costs

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

[with video]

The Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney under then-Archbishop George Pell showed no concern for the well-being of sex abuse victim John Ellis as church solicitors fought him in court, a hearing has been told.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the experiences of abuse survivor John Ellis when he went through the church’s internal process Towards Healing and then civil litigation.

Mr Ellis was sexually abused between 1974 and 1979 when he was aged between 13 and 17 by Aidan Duggan, who was a Catholic priest at Bass Hill in Sydney.

The case of Mr Ellis, who failed in his attempts to sue Cardinal Pell and the trustees of the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, has entered legal history.

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Pastor accused of sex abuse turns himself in (UPDATED)

SOUTH CAROLINA
Gaston Gazette

By Diane Turbyfill

Published: Sunday, March 9, 2014

A former church pastor is in jail on allegations that he committed sex crimes against children.

Cory Dean Moses is being held in the York County Jail without bond.

Warrants were issued for Moses’ arrest earlier this week. He turned himself in Saturday.

Moses, 38, of 2518 Liberton Court, is accused of sexually abusing a teenage church member.

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New Crosier List has Names of Priests Who Were in St Cloud

MINNESOTA
Legal Examiner

Posted by Mike Bryant
March 9, 2014

This past week, the Crosier’s released a list of Crosiers with one or more credible claims of sexual abuse of minors. On that list were the names of six who worked in the St Cloud area:

———

Neil Emon, osc
Date of birth: 11/20/1940
Date of ordination: 06/03/1967
Weekend priest/spiritual director, Central Minnesota TEC Program, 1978–88
Pastor, St. Peter, St. Cloud, Minn., 1980–89
Date removed from ecclesiastical ministry: 5/28/2002
Current location: Phoenix, living under safety plan
Current status: Retired; no priestly faculties
—————-
Gerald Funcheon
Date of birth: 07/22/1938
Date of ordination: 05/22/1965
Teacher/Spiritual Director, Cathedral High School, St. Cloud, Minn., 1980–82Date removed from ecclesiastical ministry: 4/1/1993
Status: Dispensed from vows on 6/25/1987; incardinated into Diocese of Lafayette-
in-Indiana on 7/31/1987
Current location: Missouri
Current status: No priestly faculties
—————
James Moeglein, osc
Date of birth: 01/05/1943
Date of ordination: 05/31/1970
Deacon, St. Mary’s, St. Cloud, Minn., Summer 1969–70
Weekend priest/spiritual director, Central Minnesota TEC Program, 1978-–88
Date removed from ecclesiastical ministry: 6/1/2002
Current location: Onamia, living under safety plan
Current status: No priestly faculties

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MEET THE PRESS TRANSCRIPT: March 9, 2014

UNITED STATES
NBC News – Meet the Press

BY DAVID GREGORY
March 9, 2014

DAVID GREGORY:

And good Sunday morning. Such a difficult way to begin the program this morning. More on the investigation into the mysterious disappearance of that plane and the questions about foul play, given that two passengers were traveling on stolen passports, a pretty rare occurrence. And the new reports that the plane may have tried to turn around. …

DAVID GREGORY:

Welcome back. What a year it has been for Pope Francis, as he approaches his one-year anniversary as leader of the Catholic Church. The pope created some controversy a few days ago when he said no one has done more than the Vatican to address the abuse scandals that have plagued the Church for years. He also said the portrayal of him as some sort of superman, a star, is offensive. I sat down with the archbishop of New York, Timothy Dolan. In his revealing interview, he spoke his mind about the pope, the abuse scandals and same-sex marriage

DAVID GREGORY:

Your eminence, thank you for having us to your home.

CARDINAL DOLAN:

David, you’re always welcome here. Thanks for–

DAVID GREGORY:

Thank you–

CARDINAL DOLAN:

–thanks for– taking me seriously when I said, “Come on in.” (LAUGH)

DAVID GREGORY:

We’re here. And what a year it’s been for the Catholic church and Pope Francis. What a reception. One year later, Pope Francis giving an interview this week saying, “Look, it’s been a great reception (LAUGH), but I’m not superman.” He almost found it offensive. Yet, at the same time, that reception is certainly something he’d like to use for the benefit of the church, wouldn’t he?

CARDINAL DOLAN:

Oh, he’s a good teacher, so you’re right. He knows the power symbol. He knows the power of audio-visual aids, as any good teacher does. So I think he’s shrugging’ and saying’, “Look, I’m no better than anybody else. And don’t make me a superman. But if this attention is comin’ my way, I’m gonna use it and turn the attention to Jesus and his church.” And I think he’s doing’ a splendid job of it.

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George Pell says abuse victims should be able to sue Catholic Church, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Joanna Woodburn, staff

Cardinal George Pell believes the Catholic Church should be able to be sued in cases of child sexual abuse, a royal commission has heard.

His position foreshadows a major shift in policy that could pave the way for abuse victims to sue the Church.

A public hearing of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse involving the Catholic Church has opened in Sydney and is examining allegations made by John Ellis, who failed in his attempt to sue the Church.

He was abused by Father Aidan Duggan in Sydney between 1974 and 1979.

In 2007 the New South Wales Appeals Court found the Church could not be held liable for the conduct of its priests, nor could it be sued, because it does not exist as a legal entity.

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Lawyers acting for Church run up $1.5m bill …

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Lawyers acting for Church run up $1.5m bill against victim who wanted to settle for just $100,000

MATTHEW BENNS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH MARCH 10, 2014

LAWYERS representing Cardinal George Pell and the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney helped run up bills of $1.5 million against a victim of sexual abuse who had originally been happy to settle for just $100,000.

The Royal Commission into child sex abuse heard how the lawyers — acting on the church’s instructions — “vigorously” fought John Ellis through the courts despite his second wife Nicola writing to the church to warn of his “fragile psychological state”.

The NSW Court of Appeal ruling eventually gave the Catholic Church its notorious “Ellis Defence” — that it could not be sued as a legal entity and could not be held liable for abuse committed by a priest.

Cardinal Pell gave the legal action the green light at the time. But in a part of his statement read today he back flipped and said: “My own view is that the Church in Australia should be able to be sued in cases of this kind.”

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Inquiry told Pell backs right to sue

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL AAP MARCH 10, 2014

AUSTRALIA’S most senior Catholic Cardinal George Pell believes victims of child sex abuse should be able to sue the church.

Revealed at a hearing of the federal Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Sydney on Monday, Cardinal Pell’s position represents a major policy change from the church.

The commission is examining the experiences of victim John Ellis who unsuccessfully pursued civil litigation against the church and Cardinal Pell for the abuse he suffered while an altar boy.

It’s been told the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney spent $1.5 million to defeat Mr Ellis’ $100,000 claim stemming from the hurt and distress he suffered at the hands of Father Aidan Duggan at Christ the King’s Church in Bass Hill, Sydney from 1974 to 1979.

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Catholic Church says abuse victims should be able to sue

AUSTRALIA
SBS

The Catholic Church has indicated a major shift in its attitude towards civil court claims over child abuse.

Francis Sullivan from the Church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council says all religious leaders need to ensure there is a legal entity that is appropriately insured to allow individuals to brings claim of damages for cases of child abuse.

“The controversy over whether the Church can be sued or not needs to be clarified once and for all,” Mr Sullivan told the ABC. “And we are saying that all bishops and all religious leaders need to make available a legal entity, appropriately covered with insurance and wealth, so that individuals can bring a claim of damages against it for matters of child sex abuse.”

“We’re being emphatic about it and we are being clear because we believe it’s in the interests of the community.”

Meanwhile, the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney under then-Archbishop George Pell showed no concern for the well-being of sex abuse victim John Ellis as church solicitors fought him in court, a hearing has been told.

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Church under George Pell accused of showing no concern for abuse victim

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Monday 10 March 2014

The Catholic archdiocese of Sydney under then-archbishop George Pell showed no concern for the wellbeing of sex abuse victim John Ellis as church solicitors fought him in court, a hearing has been told.

The royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse is examining the experiences of abuse survivor John Ellis when he went through the church’s internal process Towards Healing and then civil litigation.

Ellis was sexually abused between 1974 and 1979 when he was aged between 13 and 17 by Aidan Duggan, who was a Catholic priest at Bass Hill in Sydney.

The case of Ellis, who failed in his attempts to sue Cardinal Pell and the trustees of the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, has entered legal history.

In 2005 it was found he could sue neither, and this has been interpreted by some as creating church immunity from prosecution over abuse.

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How can we balance Justice for both Abused and Clerical Abuser?

IRELAND
Tony Flannery

I see I have drawn the ire of certain spokespersons for the victims of clerical sexual abuse by the report on the ACP website of our meeting with the NBSCCC. (The report can be found in its category on the ACP website) I was trying to highlight an issue that I regard as needing some open discussion in this whole sorry saga of clerical child sexual abuse. Priests who, having come out of the seminary with the emotional and sexual maturity of a teenager, due to the terribly restrictive nature of the recruitment and training, got involved in some form of relationship with a teenage girl. Bishop Geoffrey Robinson, in a recent talk, suggested that as a result of the training this was something that was a real possibility. These types of relationships, I presume, varied greatly; sometime doing a great deal of harm, and other times causing lesser damage. I suggested that a priest, who managed to put that period of his life behind him, and who had no further allegations of any nature against him, maybe should not now be publicly shamed and removed from his ministry – often forty years or more later. This is not to diminish the pain that the person making the allegation may have suffered because they may not have been able to put the experience behind them. However I think that it is necessary to distinguish between justice and retribution.

Some of my friends tell me I am a fool to engage in this type of debate. They say that there is one dominant narrative on this topic, and it is impossible to challenge it even in the slightest. They are probably right, and I find myself comparing it in some way to my experience with the Vatican, who also had one way of looking at things and insisted that this way could not be challenged.

But since I myself experienced sexual abuse as a young boy over a period of time, I believe that maybe I have some right to have my say on the topic.

A couple of things I have learned from this whole experience.

It is impossible to measure fully what effect sexual abuse in your early year has had on you. I have no doubt that it influenced my life, and probably was an underlying factor in some of the major decisions I have made.

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Fr Tony Flannery reveals he was sexually abused as a child

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Mon, Mar 10, 2014

Fr Tony Flannery, the founder member of the Association of Catholic Priests (ACP) who has been facing criticism over a call to allow priests re-enter ministry after offending, has disclosed he “experienced sexual abuse as a young boy over a period of time”.

His abuser was “long dead. I hope he is at peace” but it was why “I believe that maybe I have some right to have my say on the topic”.

Writing on his www.tonyflannery.com website, he was responding to those who criticised his report on a meeting he and Fr Seán McDonagh, both representing the ACP, had with the National Board for Safeguarding Children (NBSC) in Maynooth last Wednesday.

In it, he said they “raised the difficulties around historical allegations, and the fact that many older priests are excluded from ministry because of a mistake or mistakes they made in their earlier life, and where there was no pattern of re-offending”.

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Royal commission: Cardinal George Pell says …

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Royal commission: Cardinal George Pell says child abuse victims should be able to sue Catholic Church

March 10, 2014

Catherine Armitage
Senior Writer

For the first time Cardinal George Pell has acknowledged that the Catholic Church should be able to be sued over abuse by a priest.

The turnaround in the church’s approach to litigation by victims was revealed by senior counsel assisting the royal commission into institutional child sex abuse, Gail Furness, as it heard from witness John Ellis about his treatment by the Diocese of Sydney.

“In his statement to the royal commission, the Cardinal says, ‘Whatever position was taken by the lawyers during the litigation, or by lawyers or individuals within the Archdiocese following the litigation, my own view is that the Church in Australia should be able to be sued in cases of this kind’,” Ms Furness said. Cardinal Pell is due to give evidence in person to the commission early next week.

But Cardinal Pell’s views do not yet open the floodgates for victims to sue, according to legal experts.
A major restructure of the church in Australia to make it a ”suable entity” as well as legislative change in each state would be required to give Cardinal Pell’s words practical effect, Patrick Parkinson, a Sydney University law professor specialising in child sex abuse issues said. ”This is not going to happen overnight,” he said.

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George Pell believes abuse victims should be able to sue Catholic church

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Helen Davidson
theguardian.com, Monday 10 March 2014

The royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse has begun its eighth public hearing with a startling statement from Cardinal George Pell that he believes victims should be able to sue the church in Australia, and an indication from the church that mechanisms for this would be in place by the hearing’s end.

The public hearing, which began in Sydney on Monday, is the second chapter of the commission’s examination of the Catholic church, this time focusing on the response by the Sydney diocese and the church’s professional standards office (NSW/ACT) to the complaint of John Ellis.

Monday heard the opening statement from senior counsel assisting Gail Furness, and testimony from Ellis, the sole victim to take the stand during this hearing.

Furness outlined the case ahead, which is predicted to stretch over two weeks. Among her opening remarks, Furness read excerpts from a statement given to the royal commission by Pell, which said in hindsight the Ellis litigation had caused him some concern.

“Whatever position was taken by the lawyers during the litigation, or by lawyers or individuals within the archdiocese following the litigation, my own view is that the church in Australia should be able to be sued in cases of this kind,” wrote Pell.

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Abuse survivor shocked by Pell response

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A victim of sex abuse says Archbishop George Pell ‘slammed a door in his face’ when he tried to pursue a claim against the church.

An inquiry in Sydney has been told in the initial stages of a complaint against the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney by abuse survivor John Ellis, Cardinal Pell wrote to him saying the case could not be resolved because the priest concerned was in no state to respond.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining Mr Ellis’ experiences when he went through the church’s internal process Towards Healing and then civil litigation.

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March 9, 2014

Catholic Church signals major shift as Royal Commission investigates ‘Ellis defence’

AUSTRALIA
ABC – AM

CHRIS ULHMANN: It’s been labelled the ‘Ellis defence’ and the Catholic Church has relied on it for years to avoid making payments to survivors of sexual abuse.

When John Ellis tried to sue the church over the abuse he suffered when he was an altar boy in the 1970s, the courts rejected the claim, ruling the Church was not a legal entity, nor was it liable for abuse committed by a priest.

But ahead of this week’s hearing into John Ellis’ case by the Royal Commission into child sexual abuse, the Church leadership is signalling a major shift that would expose the Church to civil action.

Emily Bourke reports.

EMILY BOURKE: The Catholic Church offered John Ellis $30,000 in compensation for the abuse he suffered as a teenager, and the subsequent trauma that destroyed his marriage and his career in a prominent Sydney law firm.

He rejected the offer and took his case to court, but he lost in the NSW Court of Appeal in 2007.

Over the next week, the Royal Commission will hear how the Church, and Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric, George Pell handled the case.

Andrew Morrison SC, who represented John Ellis, says the ruling continues to have repercussions.

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Pope calls Church victim and those molested by priests the problem

UNITED STATES
City of Angels

Kay Ebeling

“Terrence McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org said it was ‘breathtaking’ that Francis had made the church the victim of the scandal, rather than express sorrow to the hundreds of thousands of victims or acknowledge the complicity of bishops in covering up the crimes. ‘It is astonishing, at this late date, that Pope Francis would recycle such tired and defensive rhetoric,’ McKiernan said in a statement.” Continue Reading Here in Washington Post today.

Me: Problem with Pope calling Church victim and those of us molested by priests the problem is the Pope’s words are what parishioners will hear, and that is the only thing parishioners will hear. The church set it up to end up this way from the start, they insulate the congregations against any true information about these crimes by setting the accusers up as bad guys. Great PR on the part of the church, lousy pastoral care but hey, they aren’t genuine Christians, so what do you expect. They just developed a 2-century long corporation around Christianity and billions of earthlings buy into it daily. And they allowed hundreds of thousands of kids to be raped all over the world last century in order to protect their assets. That’s a church?

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