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 18, 2014

NJ- Newark bishop defends his colleague; SNAP responds

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 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 depressing op-ed Newark Bishop Hebda defends the opulent and expensive retirement home Archbishop John Myers is building for himself.

[The Record]

We feel sorry for Newark Catholics who had assumed that Bishop Hebda would be different from and better than Myers. Hebda has no doubt dashed their hopes. And we’re sad too that Hebda displays a greater loyalty to his selfish colleague than to parishioners.

Pope Francis urges us to show mercy to the poor. Hebda, however, urges us to show mercy to an imperial and imperious monarch, a man who has shown, time and time again over a long clerical career, that he values his power and reputation more than victims and parishioners.

It’s striking that Hebda can’t even bring himself to use the phrase “Myers’ personal home.” Instead, he euphemistically calls it a “construction project.”

Finally, Hebda points out that Myers has lived for years in downtown Newark (likely because it’s convenient for him personally). If Hebda or Myers believe Myers is living a humble lifestyle, we encourage them to conduct a public tour of Myers’ living quarters so their flock can see for themselves whether their archbishop is living like a servant or a king.

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.

Review of Catholic Church in Scotland to hear from abuse victims

SCOTLAND
BBC News

Victims of abuse within the Catholic Church in Scotland will speak to a special commission set up to look into the issue.

Andrew McLellan, a former Church of Scotland moderator, is leading an external review of how the Catholic Church handles allegations of abuse.

His recommendations will aim to make the Church “a safe place for all”.

He has named 11 commissioners who will assist him, including a senior police officer, a journalist and an MP.

Dr McLellan stressed the commission would not “investigate or adjudicate” on current or historical allegations.

However, he said it would “listen to the experience of survivors of harm and abuse” and use what it learns to “bring about material change”.

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.

UK- Scottish commission to hear from abuse survivors, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 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 Scottish commission set up to review the Catholic Church’s response to abuse allegations will hear from abuse victims. We are glad that the committee is giving a voice to victims, but further action is required.

[BBC News]

The commission’s goal is not to investigate crimes, but to hear about the experiences of victims, in order to create a new policy. Working with survivors to create a better abuse policy is an important step for prevention. However, action is needed now to help already wounded victims and to prevent children from being abused today.

We hope that anyone who saw, suspects or suffered abuse will call police and that Catholic officials will be proactive and aggressively seek out victims and witnesses.

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

Priest associated with Winona Diocese pleads guilty in sex abuse case

MINNESOTA
News 8000

WINONA, Minn. –
A priest associated with the Diocese of Winona pleaded guilty in a sex abuse case.

Father Leo Koppala, 47, pleaded guilty Monday to second-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a victim under age 13. The priest has admitted to inappropriately touching a girl while attending dinner at her grandmother’s house.

Koppala joined the Diocese of Winona in September 2008 and has been serving at a pair of churches about a little over two hours west of Winona. He was assigned to the Catholic Church of Saints Peter and Paul in Blue Earth and to St. Mary’s in Winnebago.

He was charged and placed on leave in June 2013. The Diocese says he will remain on leave until his court proceedings are complete. He’ll be sentenced on March 31. Then he will return to his Diocese in Nellore, India.

Koppala was named on a list released in December by the Diocese of 14 priests accused of sexually assaulting a minor.

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.

Editorial: Stricter Child Abuse Reporting Laws Are Needed

CONNECTICUT
Connecticut Law Review

Many of us remember that, around 1997, Douglas Perlitz obtained funding to found Project Pierre Toussaint (PPT), a school for boys in Cap-Haitien, Haiti. Initially, PPT began as an intake center referred to as the 13th Street Intake Program and provided services to children of all ages, most of whom were street children.

The services provided for the children included meals, sports activities, basic classroom instruction, and access to running water for baths. PPT continued to expand and, in approximately 1999, a residential facility, Village Pierre Toussaint (referred to as the “Village”), was added. Although the Village was staffed primarily by Haitians, Perlitz was directly involved with the Village. Circa 1999, The Haiti Fund Inc. was incorporated as a charitable, religious and educational organization in Connecticut, and operated as the fund-raising arm of PPT. The fund raised large sums of money through fund-raising efforts in Connecticut, and all of the expenses associated with PPT were paid for by monies raised on behalf of PPT by the Haiti Fund.

At various times between 2001 and 2008, Perlitz traveled from airports in the U.S. to Haiti to engage in illicit sexual conduct with minors and did, in fact, engage in sexual conduct with minor boys who attended school at PPT. He abused his position of authority to entice and persuade the minors to comply with the sex acts by providing the promise of food and shelter and other benefits, including cash, cell phones, electronics, shoes, clothes, and other items. Perlitz ultimately pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 19-plus years imprisonment. We suspect that the sentence was a reflection of the fact that the government was dealing with a foreign government, impoverished young men now on the streets, poor record keeping, etc.

Several lawsuits were thereafter filed, asserting that Fairfield University, the Society of Jesus of New England, which operates the university, the charity’s board, and individuals associated with both the school and the charity were able to influence Perlitz but failed to stop abuse that was known to residential staff in Haiti. The lawsuits contended that Perlitz’s charitable operation in Haiti drew significant support, financial and otherwise, from Fairfield University and the larger religious community associated with the Jesuit school. The financial support in particular gave donors access to and control over Perlitz’s operation, according to Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian, a lawyer for the victims. During the period in which the abuse took place, the suits assert, the university contributed $57,000 to the charity and the Jesuits contributed $600,000.

At the same time, the Jesuits assigned priests in training to work at Project Pierre Toussaint, and the university arranged for volunteers to work there. According to the lawsuits, the frequent travel to and from Haiti should have alerted church and school officials to the abuse. Additionally, it was widely known on the campus of the residential school in Haiti that Perlitz was spending nights with boys and that, in some cases, boys complained to the charity’s staff, and their cries of pain could be heard at night from Perlitz’s bedroom. The lawsuits recently settled for $12 million and new suits by other boys are being threatened.

While Perlitz was prosecuted criminally, and others pursued civilly, the persons associated with the nonprofit corporation could not be charged criminally because they are not mandated reporters under Connecticut law. Were they, their failure to report could have subjected them to criminal prosecution. Sadly, this was not an isolated case and there are now attorneys and agents in the United States Attorney’s Office who specialize in these cases-cases involving criminal acts perpetrated by persons connected to and funded by Nongovernmental Organizations (NGOs)whose employees volunteers abuse children.

This year’s legislative session gives us an opportunity to remedy the situation. We should require any director, officer, or employee of a nonprofit corporation that is incorporated in or operates in Connecticut, as well as any director, officer, or employee of a religious corporation or religious society that is formed in or that operates in Connecticut, who has reasonable cause to believe that a child under the age of 18 has suffered abuse or neglect caused by a person acting on behalf of the corporation or society, to provide an oral report to the Commissioner of Children and Families or a law enforcement agency, provided that the alleged perpetrator of such abuse or neglect is employed by, contracted by, or volunteers with the organization and coaches, trains, educates, or counsels a child or children or regularly has unsupervised access to a child.

Maybe if people understood that their failure to behave morally would subject them to liability criminally, they would do the right thing. It shouldn’t matter that the abuse took place outside our state or that the school operated outside Connecticut. The foundation of the Haitian school-the entity that allowed it to operate, was within our borders, and the decision to fund the school was made by persons acting while part of an entity housed in our borders. Sadly, so did the feigned ignorance of the abuse.

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

Judge won’t hear evidence on previous crimes of accused former northern priest

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

BY KENT DRISCOLL, APTN, THE CANADIAN PRESS MARCH 18, 2014

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A northern judge says he won’t consider the previous convictions of a former priest accused of sexually abusing Inuit children.

Justice Robert Kilpatrick ruled Tuesday that he wouldn’t allow eight convictions against Eric Dejaeger to stand as evidence in his current trial on 68 counts of abusing dozens of Inuit children more than 30 years ago.

Crown lawyers had argued that Dejaeger raised the issue of his character during his testimony. While referring to eight counts of sexual assault to which he pleaded guilty at the start of his trial, Dejaeger had said he wasn’t a violent man.

Kilpatrick ruled Dejaeger had been trapped into those statements.

“The responses, when read in context, were given in defence of the specific criminal allegations then being discussed,” wrote Kilpatrick. “They were never intended by the defendant to relate to a general character trait.

“An accused does not put his or her character into issue in circumstances where he or she is tricked into doing so by inappropriate questions raised by the Crown in cross-examination.”

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.

Blue Earth priest pleads guilty in sex abuse case

MINNESOTA
SF Gate

WINONA, Minn. (AP) — A Blue Earth-area priest has admitted to fondling a girl while he was attending dinner at her grandmother’s home.

The Rev. Leo Koppala pleaded guilty Monday to second-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a victim under 13. He’ll be sentenced March 31.

The Diocese of Winona says the 47-year-old Koppala came to the diocese in September 2008.

He spent time at the Church of the Resurrection in Rochester. In 2009, he was assigned to the Catholic Church of Saints Peter and Paul in Blue Earth and to St. Mary’s in Winnebago.

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.

NJ- Notorious predator priest defrocked; SNAP responds

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 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 )

Fr. Michael Fugee of the Newark Archdiocese has been defrocked by the Vatican. He’s the first predator priest whose defrocking was insisted on by a prosecutor. And Archbishop John Myers’ recklessness, and callousness in this case is among the most egregious misconduct by a Catholic official that we’ve seen in the past decade.

This is a decades-late drop in the bucket. When church officials defrock predator priests it’s less about safeguarding kids. It’s more about church damage control. Still, we are grateful for insisting that Fugee be ousted from the priesthood. Without that Roman collar and the respect that accompanies it, Fugee will find it a bit harder to win the trust of parents, gain access to kids, and sexually assault them.

It’s crucial to remember that basically no Catholic supervisors have been punished, worldwide, for enabling and hiding horrific clergy sex crimes. The Pope must start defrocking clerics who cover up sex crimes (like Myers), not just clerics who commit them (like Fugee). Until that happens, little will change.

So why the alleged increase in defrocked pedophile priests in recent years? It’s likely because more victims across the globe are gaining the strength and courage to come forward and are reporting to (and pressuring) church officials because archaic, predator-friendly secular laws prevent most victims from seeking justice in court. And it’s likely because more bishops are convincing Vatican officials that defrocking predators is a smart public relations and legal defense strategy. Cutting all ties with the most egregious serial sex offender clerics helps convince Catholics that progress is being made.

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 Catholic Church and sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

March 19, 2014

Bill O’Chee
The Hermit

Bill O’Chee is a consultant and former Nationals senator.

There is no doubt that the Royal Commission into Sexual Abuse has done much to confront the stain of child abuse.

The most disturbing revelation has been how frequently the evil of abuse occurred inside institutions whose purpose was entirely contrary. The Salvation Army was one such institution, and the Catholic Church another.

That doesn’t make these institutions bad, but we must understand how the abuse happened.

That means we need to look not just at the plight of the victims, but also at the institutions themselves. Without this there can be no way to mend those institutions, nor to properly protect others in the future.

Let’s take the Catholic Church as an example.

Among a celibate clergy, sexual conduct, much less sexual abuse, is a grave sin against God. Clergy who indulge in sex – consensual or otherwise – have profoundly violated their vows.

These people fall into clear categories. Depending on the circumstances, they have either become misguided, or are quite simply evil.

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.

CT- SNAP to Hartford archbishop: Drop your appeal

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 2014

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

Kids are safest when predators are jailed. But sometimes that can’t happen.

The next best way to protect kids is to expose predators. That’s best done through the civil justice system.

But that will happen much less in Connecticut if Hartford Archbishop Leonard Blair has his way.

Next month, he will argue, through his expensive lawyers, that fewer child victims will be able to expose fewer child predators in court. He wants to reverse a dozen years of progress and overturn a just and fair law that safeguards kids. He’d rather protect those who commit and conceal child sex crimes than help prevent the crimes from happening in the future or help those who have been victimized.

It’s noteworthy that Blair is apparently the only individual, and his archdiocese is apparently the only institution throughout the whole state of Connecticut – that is trying to do this.

In 2002, Connecticut lawmakers wisely and compassionately reformed the state’s archaic, predator-friendly statute of limitations, extending until age 48 the time child sex crime victims have to file lawsuits, expose predators, protect kids and deter cover ups.

But that scares Archbishop Blair and other Catholic officials. And if Blair wins, all Connecticut kids will be worse off, not just the Catholic ones.

For 20 years, Catholic officials have claimed they’re doing better in clergy sex cases. If so, why do they fear this extension of the statute of limitations?

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.

Poland- priest detained for child sexual abuse, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 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 )

Another priest in Poland has been accused of sexually molesting a child and showing them pornography. We are saddened by this new revelation, but glad victims in Poland are finally being heard.

[The News]

Father Grzegorz K. is accused of abusing the minor at a parish on the outskirts of Warsaw. He is the third priests to be publically accused in recent months. We believe this is a hopeful sign that child sexual abuse by Polish priests will no longer go unspoken.

We hope that anyone who saw, suspects or suffered abuse will call police and that Catholic officials will be proactive and aggressively seek out victims and witnesses.

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.

Scottish Church’s safeguarding inquiry will hear from victims of clerical abuse

SCOTLAND
The Tablet

18 March 2014 by Abigail Frymann and Brian Morton

An external inquiry into the Catholic Church in Scotland’s handling of allegations of sexual abuse by priests will hear from abuse victims and provide a “significant opportunity to bring about material change”, the man leading the review said.

Andrew McLellan has named 11 commissioners who will work with him, including a Scottish bishop, an English bishop, the chairman of the National Catholic Safeguarding Commission, a senior police officer and an MP.

Dr McLellan, a former Church of Scotland moderator and former HM Inspector of Prisons, said the commission would “listen to the experience of survivors of harm and abuse” and use what it learns to “bring about material change”. While he said the commission would not adjudicate on current or historical allegations, he said his recommendations would aim to make the Church “a safe place for all”.
Dr McLellan also made clear that the Church in Scotland had given a “robust commitment” to acting on “all” of the commissions findings and recommendations.

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.

Update: Plaintiff expert grilled as Yakima Diocese case starts week two

WASHINGTON
Yakima Herald- Republic

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

YAKIMA, Wash. — The Diocese of Yakima continued its grilling of a clergy-abuse expert Tuesday, questioning whether he was familiar with standards for supervising deacons training to be Catholic priests.

Richard Sipe, who appeared before Judge Edward Shea via video link because of an out-of-state commitment, conceded in U.S. District Court that he was not familiar with the standards for supervision used in various dioceses around the country. Ted Buck, the diocese’s attorney, then questioned how Sipe could be familiar with what rules were in place in Yakima in 1999, when Deacon Aaron Ramirez is said to have sexually assaulted a 17-year-old boy on church property in Zillah.

The man, John Doe, alleges in court papers that Ramirez invited him into a trailer at the Resurrection Catholic Church for guitar lessons. Once there, Doe says that Ramirez plied him with alcohol and repeatedly raped him.

Ramirez fled to Mexico shortly after the incident and has not returned to the United States. Doe alleges the diocese failed to properly supervise Ramirez, among other allegations. The plaintiff brought in Sipe, who has testified the diocese failed in its supervisory capacity.

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.

NJ Priest Defrocked After Violating Court Order

NEW JERSEY
NBC New York

A New Jersey man has been officially removed from the priesthood after admitting he violated a court order against unsupervised contact with minors.

Michael Fugee, 53, had agreed in November to seek laicization from the Roman Catholic Church to resolve charges by the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office.

The Archdiocese of Newark tells The Star-Ledger on Monday that the Vatican recently completed the process of removing Fugee from the priesthood.

Prosecutors said Fugee traveled with a Colts Neck church group and heard confession despite a ban tied to an earlier case.

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.

Ridsdale called abuse ‘Lord’s work’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 18, 2014

Joel Cresswell

One of Australia’s worst pedophile priests groomed a four-year-old victim by calling her “God’s little angel” and described his abuse as “the Lord’s work”.

Former Catholic priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale, 79, has admitted his guilt in assaulting 45 children in abuse that spanned 26 years.

Among his victims were the four-year-old girl, siblings he took on holiday and an altar boy.

Ridsdale hid behind the Catholic Church as he abused, said a victim who was under the care of the Catholic diocese when she was indecently assaulted during holiday drives.

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.

Bravery must be welcomed and understood

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

18 MARCH 2014

HEATHER LASKEY

THE brave women and men who relive the acute emotional pain of their tragic stolen childhoods when they speak out at the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry need all the support they can be given.

One of the most horrifying interviews I’ve ever done was in 1976, with a man who had spent his childhood at the Nazareth Lodge in Belfast.

I was shaken by his memories of the sadism, casual brutality, unending harshness, perversion, neglect and near-starvation inflicted on unprotected children.

His story went into a book written by myself and Mavis Arnold – The Children of the Poor Clares: The Story of an Irish Orphanage.

At that time, no other book had come out on the subject. No publisher in the Republic, or in Britain, would touch it until it was courageously taken on by Appletree Press in Belfast.

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.

Son’s abuse prompts lawsuit against Bossier City church, former worker

LOUISIANA
Shreveport Times

Written by
Vickie Welborn

The parents of one of five children physically abused by former employees of Bellaire Learning Center today filed suit in Bossier District Court seeking unspecified damages from one of the workers and the church-owned day care facility.

Jessica and Stephen Ponder named Tammi Lynn Hilliard and Bellaire Baptist Church of Bossier City, doing business as Bellaire Learning Center, as defendants. Attorney Craig Smith represents the Ponder family.

Additional lawsuits are anticipated from two other families.

The Ponders accuse Hilliard of throwing “hard and heavy toys” at their son’s face two separate times in June. The first throw missed but then Hilliard launched another toy, striking the boy, Jace, in the face near an eye.

The act “disparaged and denigrated him in front of his friends and classmates” and Hilliard used a “prohibited method of discipline upon him,” the lawsuit alleges.

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.

Problem priest resurfaces in Paraguay

PENNSYLVANIA
Times Leader

March 17. 2014

By Mark Guydish – mguydish@civitasmedia.com

SCRANTON — Carlos Urrutigoity has become the problem priest the Diocese of Scranton can’t get away from, despite a distance of about 4,700 miles.

Bishop Joseph Bambera issued a statement over the weekend distancing the diocese from news that Urrutigoity has been promoted in his current diocese in Paraguay. That news was posted online by the watchdog group, Bishopaccountability.org. The diocese rebutted media accounts that said then-Bishop Joseph Martino had “allowed” Urrutigoity to “transfer” to Ciudad del Este diocese in 2004.

Controversy surrounding Urrutigoity began in 2002 when The Times Leader first reported two priests from the Society of St. John in Shohola, Pike County, had been accused of sexually molesting minor males. The names of the priests later became public as then-Bishop James Timlin revoked the rights of Urrutigoity and The Rev. Eric Ensey to publicly practice as priests in any capacity.

The two were evaluated at a facility in Canada, and according to reports later made public during a lawsuit by an alleged victim, the facility recommended both be barred permanently from public practice as priests. Such a move is not the same as defrocking, or removing a person completely from the priesthood, a rare action.

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.

Furlong abuse case comes before a judge

CANADA
The Tyee

By BOB MACKIN
Published March 17, 2014

The lawyer for John Furlong told a B.C. Supreme Court judge March 11 that his priority is to pursue a trial against one of the women alleging physical and sexual abuse, rather than the reporter who wrote an expose about the former Vancouver Olympics CEO.

This was in response to challenges made by an opposing lawyer that Furlong seemed not in any hurry to have his defamation suit against Laura Robinson tried in court.

Furlong sued the Georgia Straight and reporter Robinson for defamation in November 2012, two months after the newspaper published a story under the headline “John Furlong biography omits secret past in Burns Lake.” The article contained allegations that Furlong physically and verbally abused First Nations students when he was a physical education instructor at Immaculata Elementary School in Burns Lake, B.C. Furlong has denied the allegations.

Last October, Furlong dropped his claim against the Georgia Straight but has still not scheduled a trial against Robinson. She sued him for defamation in January and scheduled a trial to begin March 30, 2015.

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

Church was advised against costs chase

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

BY PETER TRUTE
March 18, 2014

Cardinal George Pell knew the Catholic Church was pursuing an abuse victim for more than $500,000 in legal costs against the advice of its lawyers, the royal commission into child sex abuse has heard.

A lawyer who acted for the Sydney archdiocese told the hearing then-Archbishop Pell was “seemingly giving instructions” on how to conduct some of the church’s vigorous defence against a claim made by abuse victim John Ellis.

Paul McCann, a partner in law firm Corrs Chambers Wesgarth which acted for the archdiocese in the Ellis case, on Tuesday said he had told the church it should not pursue costs but his advice was not followed.

Mr McCann said the church’s insurers, Catholic Church Insurance (CCI) had “strongly taken” the position that “they had interests to underwriters that needed to be taken into account”.

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

Archdiocese Schedules Mass For Clergy Abuse Victims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Paul Kurtz

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – Archbishop Charles Chaput will be holding a special mass this weekend for victims of clergy abuse.

It’s called the “Mass for Healing” and its scheduled for this coming Saturday at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul.

Leslie Davila, Director of the Archdiocese’ Office for Child and Youth Protection says the service was months in the planning, and born out of the work her office has done with sexual abuse victims:

“Archbishop Chaput will be the celebrant and homilist of the mass. It’s about offering meaningful prayer for victims, offering that support and guidance..promoting healing and that’s what the mass is really set up to be.”

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

Former Catholic Church official contradicts …

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY ANTONETTE COLLINS
March 18, 2014

Archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell was informed about an ex-gratia offer made to child abuse victim John Ellis, despite saying in a statement that he was not aware of it, a public inquiry has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining allegations made by Mr Ellis, who was abused by Father Aidan Duggan in Sydney between 1974 and 1979 and failed in his attempt to sue the Catholic Church in 2007.

In a statement presented to the inquiry earlier this month, Cardinal Pell said he was not aware of ex-gratia offers made to Mr Ellis.

But Monsignor Brian Rayner, who represented the Sydney Archdiocese and Archbishop Pell in Towards Healing matters in 2004, has contradicted that statement.

Under cross-examination, Monsignor Rayner maintained the Archbishop was informed.

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.

Muscoy pastor in court charged with sexual molestation, child abuse

CALIFORNIA
KABC

Rob McMillan

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (KABC) — A longtime pastor in San Bernardino County made his first court appearance Monday to answer sexual molestation and child abuse charges that date back more than a decade.

Stephen Howard, 54, is accused of sexually abusing children he met in his own church, Muscoy United Methodist Church. The abuse allegedly lasted for more than a decade. He allegedly paid his victims for sex.

Monday, Howard faced a judge in a San Bernardino County courtroom just a few miles from the Muscoy church where’s he’s served as head pastor for 13 years.

According to sheriff’s detectives, Howard sexually abused at least two victims, a 14-year-old boy and a 23-year-old man, both of whom Howard apparently met while at church.

“The 23-year-old victim stated that the sexual abuse by the suspect had been occurring since he was 9 years old, and that the victims stated to investigators that the suspect had been sexually abusing them for money,” said Jodi Miller, San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman.

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.

Accused former Wyckoff priest Michael Fugee is defrocked

NEW JERSEY
The Record

MARCH 17, 2014

BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

A priest whose indiscretions embroiled the Archdiocese of Newark and its top bishop in scandal last year has been defrocked.

An archdiocese spokesman confirmed on Monday that the Vatican has returned Michael Fugee to the lay state, meaning that after 20 years he is no longer a Roman Catholic priest.

Fugee confessed to sexually abusing a Wyckoff teenager in 2001 but later wound up working with children at youth groups across the state. Last May he was charged with violating a court-ordered ban on ministering to minors.

To dismiss the charges, Fugee signed a sweeping agreement with the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office in November. Part of the agreement was to submit a request to the Vatican that he be defrocked. The process of removing a man from the priesthood, known as laicization, sometimes takes years. The Vatican likely accelerated Fugee’s defrocking because it was voluntary and part of a court order, victims’ advocates said.

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

Woman in rape case tells her side

KANSAS
Dodge Globe

[with video]

By Nancy Calderon
Posted Mar. 17, 2014

A Dodge City woman who brought a videotape recording to the Dodge City Police Department earlier this month, allegedly depicting a local minister and her former boss sexually assaulting her, is telling her side of the story, recalling the abuse and how it all began.

The woman said the trouble began when she started volunteering at New Hope Compassion Ministries USA/International distribution center located at 1311 First Ave. New Hope was established as an extension of New Hope Dodge City based ministry — a center turned “thrift store” when it began providing clothes, furniture, toys, personal items etc. to those in need.

Through her volunteering, the opportunity for a paid position presented itself and she became an employee at New Hope with local Pastor and New Hope director, Dr. Jerry Ketner, as her boss.

The minister has been charged in connection with the crimes. His attorney, in a statement to Wichita television stations KWCH, asked that everyone consider Dr. Ketner’s history of service to the community and the presumption of innocence to which anyone accused of a crime is entitled.

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Thumbs up, thumbs down

CONNECTICUT
Greenwich Times

Thumbs up to Voice of the Faithful and Bridgeport Bishop Frank Caggiano for holding a measured meeting that offered the promise of positive forward movement. Having been banned from gathering on diocesan property under Caggiono’s predecessor, the VOTF crowd appeared to keep an open mind, even on issues in which Caggiano acknowledged church reform was unlikely. Group members also resisted raising questions related to the sexual abuse scandal that inspired their origins. More challenging meetings are surely in store, but as Caggiano acknowledged, this was just the beginning of the conversation.

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Duluth: Judge limits two sex abuse lawsuits against Catholic diocese

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Tom Olsen
Forum News Service
POSTED: 03/17/2014

A judge Monday tossed out portions of two lawsuits seeking to force the Diocese of Duluth to release documents detailing child sexual abuse cases.

Sixth Judicial District Judge David Johnson ruled that the plaintiffs cannot pursue the release of the documents through private and public nuisance claims. Counts charging the diocese with negligence in its handling of sex abuse cases will remain open.

The decision does not end the plaintiffs’ hopes of compelling the release of the documents, but it does eliminate a potential avenue of argument for the alleged victims.

Susan Gaertner, the Minneapolis attorney representing the diocese, said she was pleased by the ruling, but not surprised. The plaintiffs’ contentions that the diocese created a nuisance were “creative, bordering on fanciful” and outside the realm of case law, she said.

“It’s an important decision because it ensures that the case will be conducted within the confines of established law,” she said. “It’s important that the court holds everyone to the rules, and that’s what this does.”

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The abuse survivor who reminds me that we are suppopsed to be a light to the world

UNITED KINGDOM
Catholic Herald

By FRANCIS PHILLIPS on Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Last week I met an inspirational Catholic: Dawn Eden, an American survivor of sexual abuse as a child who has turned this trauma into an apostolate to bring hope to others who have experienced similar abuse. Dawn is a convert from Judaism; her abuse happened at the hands of an adult at her local synagogue and from her mother’s boyfriend after her parents split up.

I asked her what led her into the very Church which the media has been delighted to portray as the villain of the piece regarding the abuse of children. Her reply surprises me. She admits that at first she was put off by news of the scandals besetting the Church; but that she then witnessed the grief that ordinary Catholics, as well as members of the hierarchy, showed when they learnt of the crimes and cover-ups. Above all, she was moved by the compassion for the victims that she saw in the Church. Here was a Church that acknowledged its wounds but which also knew that only the light of Christ could transform the darkness within.

This is the point of my blog: instead of focusing on the obvious and negative aspects of this shameful episode in the Church’s recent history, Dawn witnessed to the deeper wellsprings of the Church’s sacramental charity and was thus able to distinguish between the appalling sins of individual members and the loving compassion of the Church as the “mystical body of Christ”. This was the Church she has chosen to join.

In his blog for 7th March, William Oddie did a fine job of defending the Church’s record in rooting out paedophilia within her ranks (and showing how it has been unfairly been made a scapegoat by the media). Dawn’s apostolate, eloquently argued in her book “My Peace I Give You: Healing Sexual Wounds with the Help of the Saints”, complements Oddie’s robust defence. Instead of fixating on the past she wants her audiences and readers to understand the theological virtue of hope. “People keep repeating that abuse is soul-destroying” she said to me, “but Christianity is about hope. The temptation is to continue to live in past pain – but this accentuates it; it doesn’t bring about healing.”

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Redemptorist sex abuse trial in Quebec City draws to an end

CANADA
CBC News

A judge in Quebec City heard closing arguments today in a class-action lawsuit that alleges sexual abuse by members of the clergy.

It marks the final stage in the province’s first ever class-action lawsuit over sexual abuse by priests to go to trial. Until now, all other cases had been settled out of court.

Lawyers representing more than a dozen men who attended Séminaire Saint-Alphonse, a private boarding school in Saint-Anne-de-Beaupré near Quebec City, alleged there was systemic abuse and a cover-up at the school.

Serge Létourneau, a lawyer in the case, said that two of the alleged abusers were once principals at the school and also sat on the provincial executive committee of the Redemptorist Order.

During the trial, 12 men testified about being molested regularly in their youth during the ’70s and ’80s.

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Michael Fugee expelled from priesthood for flouting ban on contact with children

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Mark Mueller/The Star-Ledger
on March 17, 2014

Acting with uncustomary speed, the Vatican has expelled a New Jersey man from the priesthood for repeatedly defying a lifetime ban on ministry to children.

Michael Fugee, 53, who attended youth retreats and heard confessions from minors despite signing a court-sanctioned decree forbidding such activities, has been returned to the lay state, said Jim Goodness, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Newark.

“Very recently all the procedures were completed,” Goodness said Monday night. “He is no longer a priest of the archdiocese.”

The Vatican typically takes a year or longer to expel priests, a process known as laicization. In some cases, the procedure drags on for several years.

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Pell ‘instructed’ lawyers in abuse case, royal commission into abuse hears

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 18, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell was closely involved in the handling of a controversial court case brought by a former altar boy who was sexually abused by a Sydney priest, the royal commission has heard.

The evidence, given this afternoon by one of the church’s lawyers, Paul McCann, appears to conflict with other evidence heard by the commission that the former Archbishop of Sydney had little or no role in the conduct of the case.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is investigating an ultimately unsuccessful attempt to sue the church made by the abuse victim, John Ellis, which was rejected by the NSW Supreme Court in 2007.

Mr McCann said he had been told “to defeat the litigation” and his instructions throughout the case came from Cardinal Pell’s private secretary, Michael Casey, with the apparent authorisation of the then-archbishop himself.

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Trials of a recalcitrant priest

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank O’Shea | 18 March 2014

Let us talk about Catholic priests. Consider especially those who are now in their 60s, after a life of service to their church. They were seminarians in the heady days of Vatican II when everything seemed possible. They managed to survive the aftermath of was Humanae Vitae and continued to preach and counsel, to lead the sacred rites and to be faithful leaders of their flocks.

Some have directed retreats or preached parish missions; others have ministered to the young in schools and youth clubs; all have lived by the dictum that service to the least — the poor and mentally ill, the prisoners and prostitutes, the homeless and the addicted — is service to their god. But while their life has been exemplary, they cannot help being stained by association with those who have disgraced their calling.

In addition to this many priests see themselves as being under siege from an old guard in the Vatican. As this is written, six Irish priests have been silenced so that they cannot hear confessions or officiate at baptisms, weddings or funerals. There is some official term like ‘had their faculties removed’ but that sounds too painful. Two are Redemptorists; the others are a Passionist, an Augustinian, a Capuchin and a Marist — all order men. Tony Flannery, one of the Redemptorists thus silenced, has written of his experience.

In the aftermath of one of the reports on clerical sexual abuse in Ireland, he speculated on how difficult it would soon be to find priests for ordinary parish work. In that context, he said he did not believe ‘the priesthood, as we currently have it in the church, originated with Jesus’.

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The Record: Church insensitivity

NEW JERSEY
The Record

MARCH 18, 2014

EVEN IN death, the Archdiocese of Newark puts the interests of its institutional self above the people it is charged to serve. Its new funeral policy for priests who were removed from ministry on sexual abuse accusations is designed to shield the families of these priests, as well as the Catholic Church, from unwanted publicity. The victims of sexual abuse do not matter.

The policy approved by Archbishop John Myers is skewed toward the clergy. In a letter to priests, the vicar general for the archdiocese writes that the policy “allows for sensitivity to the family of the deceased priest as well as to avoid possible negative publicity or further embarrassment to the family and the Church.”

To further ensure that there is little negative publicity, no publication of the date, time or location of the funeral will be made to the public. The deceased priest — assuming he has not been defrocked — can be buried in clerical vestments.

These now-deceased men were removed from ministry for a reason: credible sexual abuse allegations. The Newark Archdiocese has a terrible history in dealing with abusive priests. Given that, it is impossible to understand why its first concern still is to be sensitive to feelings of these deceased priests’ families. These men are responsible for what they did. If they brought shame onto themselves, the church and their families, that is their own doing. Where is the sensitivity for the victims of their behaviors?

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Serial paedophile priest told rape victim she was ‘God’s little angel’

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 18, 2014

Mark Russel

Gerald Ridsdale, one of Australia’s worst paedophile priests, told one of his victims: “It was the Lord’s work”, a court has heard.

Another victim said his belief that the Catholic Church hierarchy had known what Ridsdale and other priests were doing was reinforced by Cardinal George Pell’s evidence to the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child sex abuse last year.

Dr Pell told the inquiry he had only recently discovered that former Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns had destroyed documents relating to sexual abuse allegations.

Bishop Mulkearns was responsible for shifting Ridsdale and several other priests around parishes after concerns were raised by families.

Dr Pell, who has been been appointed the Prefect for the Economy of the Holy See, one of the Vatican’s most senior roles responsible for reforming its administration and finances, lived with Ridsdale at a Ballarat presbytery in the early 1970s but said he was not a close friend.

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‘No doubt’ Pell knew abuse details

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Cardinal George Pell knew a law firm defending the Catholic Church in an abuse claim would refuse to mediate, challenge the victim’s claims and oppose it on time limit grounds, an inquiry has heard.

Lawyer Paul McCann, a partner at Corrs Chambers Wesgarth, was giving evidence to the royal commission into child sexual abuse about his firm’s actions for the church and the then-Archbishop of Sydney Dr Pell in 2004.

His firm was instructed to defend the case brought by abuse victim John Ellis.

Mr Ellis was abused for five years by priest Father Aidan Duggan at Bass Hill in Sydney, starting in 1974, when Mr Ellis was 13.

Documents shown to the royal commission showed Mr McCann advised the church would ‘vigorously defend’ the case on the grounds of a time limitation applying to when an action could be commenced.

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Zatrzymano księdza Grzegorza K. z Tarchomina. Podejrzenie gwałtu na małoletnim

POLSKA
Gazeta

Ks. Grzegorz K., były proboszcz parafii na warszawskim Tarchominie, został dziś zatrzymany. Ma to związek ze śledztwem prowadzonym przez Prokuraturę Rejonową w Wołominie. – Podejrzenia wobec K. dotyczą gwałtu na małoletnim – podaje TVN 24, powołując się na informacje prokuratora.

– Ksiądz został zatrzymany na polecenie prokuratora. Jutro będą prowadzone z nim czynności – powiedziała rzeczniczka Prokuratury Okręgowej Warszawa-Praga Renata Mazur.

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Ks. Grzegorz K. zatrzymany pod zarzutem współżycia z nieletnim

POLSKA
WP

[z wideo]

Ks. Grzegorz K., b. proboszcz parafii na warszawskim Tarchominie, skazany już prawomocnie za czyny o charakterze pedofilskim, został zatrzymany. Ma to związek ze śledztwem prowadzonym przez Prokuraturę Rejonową w Wołominie.

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Another Polish priest faces child sex abuse allegations

POLAND
The News

A Polish priest was detained on Monday in connection with allegations of paedophilia as the Roman Catholic Church in Poland struggles to cope with a rash of child abuse cases.

Father Grzegorz K. (full name withheld under Polish privacy laws) is alleged to have had sexual intercourse with a minor and to have shown the child pornographic material, among other crimes.

The allegations follow Polish archbishop Jozef Wesolowski being recalled last year to Rome amid claims he sexually abused children in the Dominican Republic and a 36-year-old priest, Wojciech G, is also accused of molesting boys while serving as a parish priest on the Caribbean island.

According to Renata Mazur, spokesperson of the District Prosecutor’s Office of Warsaw-Praga, the latest allegations refer to crimes carried out by Father Grzegorz regularly between 1 January 2000 and 7 January 2003.

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Pennsylvania diocese laments priest’s incardination in Paraguay

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholic Culture

The Diocese of Scranton has issued a statement lamenting a Paraguayan diocese’s decision to allow the incardination of a priest accused of sexual abuse.

In 2005, Bishop Joseph Martino, now retired, suppressed the Society of St. John– which had been known for its promotion of the extraordinary form of the Mass, but also criticized for reports of lavish spending– following accusations of sexual abuse against its founder, Father Carlos Urrutigoity. Bishop Martino’s predecessor, Bishop James Timlin, had suspended the priest’s faculties after a diocesan review board found an abuse allegation credible.

Father Urrutigoity was subsequently incardinated in the Diocese of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay, named a monsignor, and appointed diocesan vicar general.

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March 17, 2014

Opinion: Focus on archbishop’s commitment to serve

NEW JERSEY
The Record

MARCH 17, 2014

BY BERNARD A. HEBDA
THE RECORD

The Most Reverend Bernard A. Hebda is coadjutor archbishop of Newark.

AS I READ Jeff Green’s article (“Lifestyles of the Newark archbishops stand in stark contrast,” March 9) I was disappointed that The Record would have so quickly equated a difference in residence with a difference in lifestyle.

I wish the article would have focused on what Archbishop Myers and I have in common: namely, a commitment to serving the people of the archdiocese and advancing the generous work that has for so long been undertaken by this local church, particularly in support of those who are economically disadvantaged.

In the six months since I was named the coadjutor archbishop of Newark, I have been especially delighted to learn of all that the archdiocese has been doing under Archbishop Myers’ leadership to support elementary and high school students, particularly in our inner-city communities, and to provide needed social services and spiritual support to those most in need throughout Essex, Hudson, Union and Bergen counties. It is largely due to his vision, personal investment of time and talent, and fiscal management that the archdiocese continues to be in a position to put flesh on the Gospel.

While The Record has been quick to criticize Archbishop Myers for the expenditures related to the construction project in Clinton Township, no mention has ever been made of the far greater savings that have come from his decision to live in the Cathedral rectory on Ridge Street these past thirteen years, rather than to maintain a full-time residence of his own. I admire his willingness to forego personal privacy in order to live in community with four or five other priests and I am inspired by his commitment to live in the intensely urban setting of inner-city Newark. While Green notes my three rooms in the dormitory at Seton Hall, he never mentions that Archbishop Myers has only two in the cathedral rectory that he can call his own (a bedroom and an office) or that they are in a zip code that few would consider enviable.

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Catholic Priest Pleads Guilty to Criminal Sexual Assault

MINNESOTA
KEYC

By Dan Ruiter, News Director

BLUE EARTH, Minn. –
A Catholic Priest pleads guilty to Criminal Sexual Conduct today.

Father Leo Koppala pleaded guilty to second degree criminal sexual conduct in a Faribault County Courtroom Monday. Koppala was a priest in Blue Earth at the time of the crime.

Investigators say Koppala inappropriately touched an 11-year-old girl at her home last June.

The Diocese of Winona put Koppala on leave while the case was in the courts.

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Expert talks Pope Francis, Catholics at Guilford

NORTH CAROLINA
News & Record

By Nancy McLaughlin nancy.mclaughlin@news-record.com
Posted on March 17, 2014

Even if you haven’t heard of Jason Berry, you are probably aware of his work: “Vows of Silence: The Abuse of Power in the Papacy of John Paul II” has Spanish, Australian and Italian editions.
A documentary based on the book won a Best TV Documentary Award.

The Vatican expert and award-winning journalist will speak on “Pope Francis and the Church: “Confronting Sexual and Financial Scandal,” at 7:30 p.m., April 3, at Guilford College. The discussion will take place at the Community Center on campus.

His remarks come at the first year anniversary for Pope Francis.

The event is free and open to the public.

Berry produces documentaries and writes on culture and politics for many publications.

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Earlier crimes may be included as evidence in priest abuse case

CANADA
Vancouver Sun

By Kent Driscoll, APTN, The Canadian Press March 17, 2014

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A northern judge is deciding whether to consider the previous convictions of a former priest accused of sexually abusing Inuit children.

Eric Dejaeger, a former Oblate priest, is facing 68 counts of abuse against dozens of children from his time as a missionary in Igloolik, Nunavut, between 1978 and 1982. The allegations range from fondling to the sodomy of a little girl duct-taped to the priest’s bed.

Dejaeger pleaded guilty to another eight counts as his trial began last November.

On the witness stand Dejaeger testified that the most recent offences he admitted to “just happened.” He suggested that the nature of the offences shows that he’s not a violent man.

Crown prosecutor Doug Curliss argued Monday that since Dejaeger brought the question of his character into court, that gives the prosecution the right to introduce information from Dejaeger’s previous convictions.

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How should we bury offending priests?

NEW JERSEY
U.S. Catholic

By Kira Dault

The Archdiocese of Newark has released a policy for planning the funerals of priests who have been removed from ministry on sexual abuse accusations.

The new policy requires that the funeral Mass be held away from any churches where the priest worked or lived, and that obituaries be published without photos or specific information about when and where the funeral Mass will be held. Furthermore, the viewing “is to be a private viewing (not in a church) for members of the family and close friends only.”

A letter from the archdiocese says that these new procedures will “allow for sensitivity to the family of the deceased priest as well as to avoid possible negative publicity or further embarrassment to the family and the church.”

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Trial of Eric Dejaeger, former Oblate priest, resumes

CANADA
CBC News

The trial of a former Oblate priest resumed this morning in Iqaluit.

Sixty-six-year-old Eric Dejaeger faces dozens of charges of alleged sexual abuse against children in Igloolik three decades ago.

Today, Crown prosecutor Doug Curliss made an application before the court asking whether he can cross-examine Eric Dejaeger regarding his criminal record.

Curliss argued there are questions surrounding Dejaeger’s character and morality and he wants to ask him about some of his testimony.

Dejaeger’s lawyer Malcolm Kempt says the Crown’s application should simply be denied.

He says the Crown has already asked leading questions of his client

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Bischöfe vergeben neue Studie zum sexuellen Missbrauch Minderjähriger

DEUTSCHLAND
Sachsische Zeitung

[EINLADUNG ZUR PRESSEKONFERENZ AM 24. MÄRZ 2014 IN BONN – Deutsche Bischofskonferenz]]

[Summary: The German Bishops’ Conference once again has started a research project on sexual abuse of minors. The project was approved last week in Munster at the meeting of the conference and is to include priests, deacons and male members of religious orders.]

Bonn. Die Deutsche Bischofskonferenz startet erneut ein Forschungsprojekt zum Thema „Sexueller Missbrauch an Minderjährigen“. Während der Frühjahrs-Vollversammlung in der vergangenen Woche in Münster sei das Projekt „Sexueller Missbrauch an Minderjährigen durch katholische Priester, Diakone und männliche Ordensangehörige im Bereich der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz“ neu beschlossen worden, hieß es am Montag in einer Mitteilung.

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Assignment Record – Rev. James F. Kuntz, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: James F. Kuntz was ordained a Jesuit priest of the New York Province in 1977. He spent his career as an educator in New York, New Jersey and California. From 1994-1999 he was in Abuja, Nairobi where he was the founding principal of a boarding school for children grades 7-12. In February 2008 Kuntz was found to have child pornography on his computer. He pleaded guilty to possession of child pornography in September of that year.

Ordained: 1977

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UK- Catholic friar admits downloading child pornography, SNAP responds

UNITED KINGDOM
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

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 Catholic friar from Camden has pleaded guilty to possession of thousands of extremely graphic child pornography images. We are glad that that he is facing justice, but concerned about potential victims.

[Ham & High]

Timothy Gardner was a religious education teacher at Maria Fidelis Catholic School. It is always extremely troubling when child abuse allegations surface, but it is even more worrisome when that person has worked directly with children. There are hundreds of potential victims.

We hope that anyone who saw, suspects, or suffered abuse by Gardner will contact police. And we hope that Catholic Church officials will aggressively reach out to any possible victims or witnesses.

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Pervert Catholic friar who taught at Camden school admits downloading 5,000 child abuse images

UNITED KINGDOM
Ham & High

by Tom Marshall
Thursday, March 6, 2014

Camden education chiefs have sought to reassure parents after a Catholic friar, who taught at one of the borough’s schools, admitted downloading thousands of sickening child abuse images.

Gospel Oak friar Timothy Gardner, described as a “senior figure” in Catholic education by the council, is facing jail after he pleaded guilty at Southwark Crown Court on Monday to 10 counts of making indecent images of children.

He was found with 5,005 pictures. Some were graded at levels four and five, the most extreme categories, which can include scenes of bondage and rape.

Gardner, 41, of St Dominic’s Priory Church, Southampton Road, taught religious education (RE) at Maria Fidelis Catholic School for six years from 2006 to 2012.

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Cleared priest returns as sister speaks of ordeal

IRELAND
The Journal

BY GREG HARKIN – 17 MARCH 2014

A RETIRED Dublin schoolteacher has spoken of her heartache after her twin brother, a parish priest, was falsely accused of indecent assault.

Fr Eugene Boland (67) returned to his ministry at the weekend, four years after the allegations were made against him and more than 18 months after a jury took an hour to clear him on five charges.

St Mary’s Church in Killyclogher, just outside Omagh in Co Tyrone, was packed with 900 parishioners as Fr Boland returned to ministry, just days after being cleared to do so by church authorities in Rome.

The priest, originally from Moville in Co Donegal, wept as he hugged family and friends.

“This should never have happened,” Fr Eugene’s twin sister Aine told the Herald after the Saturday night Mass.

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NJ priests removed for sex abuse can be buried in vestments, Newark Archdiocese says

NEW JERSEY
The Star-Ledger

By Jeff Goldman/The Star-Ledger
on March 17, 2014

Clergyman removed from churches in the Newark Archdiocese following credible sexual abuse charges can be buried in their ceremonial robes, according to a report on NorthJersey.com.

The policy, approved by Archbishop John J. Myers and the Presbyteral Council in November, also mandates that obituaries not include the time, date or location of the funeral, the report said. The funeral also isn’t allowed to take place in a church where the priest worked or lived.

The archdiocese’s goal is to keep the funerals out of the spotlight and avoid giving “more pain back to the community than they’ve already been through,” spokesman Jim Goodness told the website. A letter to priests at the Newark Archdiocese’s 961 churches also indicated the policy was implemented to protect the priests’ families and avoid negative media coverage, according to the report

Victims rights groups assert that credibly accused religious figures should not have the status of a priest when they’re laid to rest. One group, Road to Recovery Inc, is upset that priests removed from their posts can be buried in Mass vestments and that other priests are encouraged to attend, the report said.

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Monsignor Brian Rayner reveals …

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Monsignor Brian Rayner reveals he ‘welled up’ when he took John Ellis to meet abuser Father Aidan Duggan in a nursing home

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH MARCH 17, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell’s former right hand man has disputed evidence given to the royal commission into child sex abuse.

Cardinal Pell has told the commission in a statement that the reason the church fought legal action against a victim of child sex abuse was because he had been told the victim wanted millions – not just $100,000.

However Monsignor Brian Rayner, the former chancellor of the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, said today that he would have told the Cardinal, then an archbishop, that the victim, John Ellis, had suggested to settle for $100,000 through the church’s controversial Towards Healing protocol.

“I had regular meetings with the archbishop and I would have kept him informed,” Monsignor Rayner said.

The archdiocese ended up spending around $1.5 million in legal costs but it won the case with a ruling that the church was not a legal entity and could not be sued, blocking any other similar claims against it around the country in what has become known as the Ellis decision.

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Catholic priest accused of sexual assault makes first appearance

CANADA
Grande Prairier

Monday, March 17, 2014

By Erica Fisher
Grande Prairie

The Catholic priest accused of sexual assault of a minor is expected to make his first court appearance in Peace River today.

59 year old Abraham Azhakathu of Manning was arrested earlier this month, after the minor reported assaults that took place in 2013.

He has since been released but cannot live in Manning, where he practiced at the time, or be alone with anyone under the age of 16.

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Pell and cleric at odds on handling of child sex case

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 18, 2014

CARDINAL George Pell and another senior Catholic cleric have given conflicting accounts of the former archbishop of Sydney’s handling of a controversial child-sex abuse case.

The cardinal’s former chancellor, Brian Rayner, told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he felt sidelined during the litigation and believed the abuse in question had taken place, contrary to what the church argued.

The 2007 case, in which former altar boy John Ellis unsuccessfully sued the Catholic Church over his abuse at the hands of a Sydney priest, is being investigated by the royal commission.

Church documents tendered in evidence show Cardinal Pell subsequently apologised to Mr Ellis, claiming not to have known about his previous offer to settle the claim for a fraction of the $1.5 million the church ultimately spent defending itself.

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NJ- Catholic officials want to bury predators quietly; SNAP responds

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 17, 2014

Statement by New Jersey SNAP leader Mark Crawford ( 732-632-7687, mecrawf@comcast.net )

Once again, for clearly selfish reasons, Newark Catholic officials are taking secretive steps to reduce public attention on predator priests. Shame on them.

[The Record]

Church officials will claim that this is about being sensitive to victims. It’s not. Church officials’ use of the phrase “negative publicity” shows their true intent: it’s about keeping predator priests out of the news. Church officials know that every time a child molesting cleric is mentioned in public, other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers might step forward. Preventing such disclosures continues to be a top priority in the Catholic hierarchy.

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MN- Predator priest from Winona rises through clerical ranks

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 17, 2014

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

Priest with child sex abuse allegations is promoted
He is accused of molesting at least four boys & was sued
But he went overseas and is second-in-command of a diocese
And at least one child sex lawsuit against him has been settled
Argentine native also was ordained in and worked in Winona MN

A Catholic priest who worked in Winona and allegedly molested several boys is now second-in-command at a diocese in Paraguay. And a victims’ group wants Minnesota bishops to reach out to others he has hurt and urge the Pope to intervene and defrock him.

[Pocono Record]

Fr. Carlos Urrutigoity was accused of sexually abusing at least four boys at St. Gregory’s Academy in a town called Moscow in northeastern Pennsylvania between 2002-2004. At least two civil suits were filed and one of them was settled for $380,000. Scranton Catholic officials sent Fr. Urrutigoity to a church treatment center which concluded that he “should be removed from active ministry and his (priestly) faculties should be revoked.”

But last week, a Boston-based research group called BishopAccountability.org disclosed that Fr. Urrutigoity is now in the Diocese of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay and is its Vicar General.

In the 1990s, Fr. Urrutigioity lived and taught at the St. Pius X Seminary in Winona. He belonged to a controversial and very conservative religious order known as the Society of St. Pius X.

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NY- Clergy sex abuse victims beg synod to defrock archbishop

CANADA/UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 17, 2014

For more information: Melanie Jula Sakoda ( 925-708-6175 cell, melanie.sakoda@gmail.com ), Cappy Larson ( cappy@rlarson.com ), David Clohessy (314-566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com)

Clergy sex abuse victims beg synod to defrock archbishop
He was Orthodox Church’s highest ranking cleric in Canada
But he was just found guilty of sexually assaulting a young boy
SNAP to church officials: “You’re breaking your own abuse policy”

Members of an abuse survivors’ group are urging Orthodox Church officials to defrock Canada’s highest ranking archbishop who has been found guilty of molesting a child.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, say that the denomination’s panel which is responsible for disciplining clergymen is breaking church policy by not permanently ousting Archbishop Seraphim Storheim, who was convicted in January of sexually violating an 11 year old boy.

[Winnipeg Free Press]

The synod of bishops of the Long Island based Orthodox Church in America (OCA) will begin its spring session in Syosset, New York, tomorrow. Among the items on their agenda are further “decisions” concerning Storheim.

[Orthodox Church in America]

[Pokrov]

The Policies, Standards, and Procedures on Sexual Misconduct, approved by the OCA’s synod at their Fall 2013 meeting, state that “Any clergy … found to have committed child sexual abuse … shall be deposed by the Holy Synod of Bishops, and shall be permanently prohibited from exercising any functions or responsibilities of parish ministry. …”

[Orthodox Church in America]

“This is a no-brainer and should have happened weeks ago,” said Cappy Larson of SNAP. “Both Archbishop Seraphim’s guilt and church policy are crystal clear. Church officials’ delays and indecision are helping a criminal and hurting his victims.”

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Rome–Victims upset about papal sainthood

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, March 17

For more information: Barbara Blaine, SNAP Founder and President +1 (312)399-4747, SNAPblaine@gmail.com and David Clohessy, SNAP Executive Director +1 (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Victims upset about papal sainthood
Several travel to Rome soon to hold vigil
Group: Honoring John Paul II “rubs salt into deep wounds”
“It also will likely encourage more church cover ups,” they say
SNAP “Church must denounce, not praise, those who hurt kids”

An international support group for clergy sex abuse victims plans to hold a vigil on the eve of the canonization of Pope John Paul II.

“He did many things well but for decades, he turned a blind eye to clergy sex crimes and cover ups,” said Barbara Blaine, president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “For leaving kids in harms’ way, he should not receive further honors and praise because rewarding wrongdoers encourages wrongdoing.”

Few dispute that Pope John Paul II “did almost nothing to help stop priests from raping children and stop bishops from hiding these crimes,” Blaine said.

SNAP believes that the pontiff “must have known” about the multiple sexual abuse allegations against Legionaries of Christ founder Fr Marcial Maciel Degollado. Instead of disciplining or defrocking Fr. Maciel, the pope held a highly publicized special ceremony celebrating the anniversary of Maciel’s ordination.

[Irish Times]

“It sends a disturbing message when Catholic officials, who ignored or concealed abuse, are honored,” said Miguel Hurtado of London SNAP. “The message is ‘keep putting the reputations of officials above victims, keep putting children in danger. There will be no negative consequences for you in this church.’”

“Catholic officials must punish, not praise, those who hurt kids, whether directly or indirectly. Not doing so leads to continued cover ups,” said Nicky Davis, Australian SNAP Leader. “It also rubs salt into already deep wounds of victims and betrayed Catholics.”

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Catholic in Australia: Demographics, scandal underlie tectonic shifts

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Tom Roberts | Mar. 17, 2014

MELBOURNE AND SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA More than a hundred people turned out on a Sunday afternoon in late November to the crypt of historic St. Patrick’s Church in Sydney for a presentation by a forensic psychologist on the sex abuse scandal jarring the Catholic community in Australia.

During a question-and-answer session, a woman in the audience made a sarcastic reference to priests once thinking they were “ontologically different.” The phrase provoked an immediate howl of laughter, as if she’d delivered a punch line of a joke.

This over-50 (and probably well over-60) crowd, the equivalent of a Call to Action gathering in the United States, represents the very generation raised on such notions of clerical superiority and priestly otherness. It is the same generation that, in terms of numbers of priests, nuns and people in the pews, had brought Australian Catholicism to a zenith not too many years ago.

A linchpin of that phenomenon — a clergy standing “in persona Christi” and marked indelibly as something different from the rest of humanity — is now as much taken for granted as a laughing point as it once was a tenet of faith. Granted, the line was an offhand observation in a presentation and discussion of more immediate matters. But it contained, like an exploration of Catholic DNA, a key to a striking transformation of Catholic life that appears to be occurring in regions where Catholicism once seemed a settled and unchanging reality.

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Court this week

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

The sex abuse trial of now-defrocked Oblate priest Eric Dejaeger continues tomorrow (Monday, 17 March 2014),. While Dejaeger is no longer a Roman Catholic priest he is still an Oblate.

You may recall that the Dejaeger sex abuse trial was adjourned 23 January of this year to allow the Crown time to prepare a legal case to allow the introduction of Dejaeger’s criminal record as evidence.

Prior to the adjournment Dejaeger had been testifying in his own defence. He has entered guilty pleas to to eight of the approximately 80 charges against him. A handful of charges were dismissed – Dejaeger, who has been twice convicted in the past, denies all of the multitude of other charges against him.

According to Nunatsiaq Online, at the time the trial was adjourned Justice Kilpatrick, the presiding judge, said that, starting 17 March 2014, the trial will take a week to wrap up “to tie up loose ends.” “It will be over that week,” Kilpatrick warned the lawyers. “All evidence must be in.”

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Disabled boy wanted to kill sex predator…

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Disabled boy wanted to kill sex predator, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse told

SALLY BROOKS THE ADVERTISER MARCH 17, 2014

THE mother of an intellectually disabled youth allegedly sexually abused by paedophile bus driver Brian Perkins two decades ago is still searching for answers from the Catholic Church, an inquiry has heard.

After submitting a list of 35 questions to Archbishop Philip Wilson, Helen Gitsham told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday that she is still waiting for them to be answered.

The inquiry is probing the handling of claims of child sexual abuse at St Ann’s Special School at Marion between 1985 and 1991.

In her opening address, counsel assisting the commission Sophie David said Perkins was employed by the school as a bus driver. “He also volunteered in the woodwork class and provided respite care to parents on weekends,” Ms David said.

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SA sex abuse boy took knife to molester

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

BY MARGARET SCHEIKOWSKI
March 17, 2014

An intellectually disabled boy became so angry at being repeatedly sexually abused by his school’s bus driver that he put a knife to the man’s face, an inquiry has been told.

“I wanted to kill him, I wanted him to die,” the now 38-year-old man told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday, at its first Adelaide sitting.

The commission’s ninth case study is focused on events from 1986 to 1991 at St Ann’s Special School for children with intellectual disabilities.

It will investigate responses made by the South Australian police, the school and the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide to claims of child sexual abuse by Brian Perkins.

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Priest cleared of abuse applauded 17 times in church

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

BY GREG HARKIN – 17 MARCH 2014

Almost 1,000 worshippers burst into applause 17 times as they welcomed a parish priest back to their church after he was cleared of child sex abuse.

Nearly four years to the day after false assault allegations were made against him, Father Eugene Boland looked nervous as he returned to his flock in Killyclogher near Omagh on Saturday.

Around 900 people crammed into St Mary’s Chapel and hundreds more in the parish hall next door to welcome back the 67-year-old cleric.

Fr Boland was returning to the ministry 18 months after being found not guilty by a jury on five charges of indecent assault, “inappropriate touching” of a girl, then aged 15, in Londonderry more than 20 years ago.

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San Bernardino pastor accused of paying boys for sex acts

CALIFORNIA
KABC

SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (KABC) — The lead pastor of Muscoy United Methodist Church in San Bernardino has been arrested on suspicion of molesting at least two boys.

Stephen Howard, 54, was taken into custody Thursday and booked at the Central Detention Center for lewd acts with a child under 14, oral copulation with a person under 18, and sodomy with a person under 18. He was being held in lieu of $25,000 bail.

Investigators say at least two victims, one 14 years old and the other 23 years old, claimed Howard paid them for sex acts.

The 23-year-old says Howard has been abusing him since he was 9 years old. The alleged abuse occurred in the cities of San Bernardino, Rancho Cucamonga and Fontana.

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Pell’s statement to abuse inquiry disputed

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

March 17, 2014

Annette Blackwell

A close associate of Cardinal George Pell has contradicted the former archbishop’s assertion that he was unaware of how much money abuse victim John Ellis was seeking from the church.

Monsignor Brian Rayner was chancellor and vicar-general of the archdiocese when Mr Ellis went through the internal church system of dealing with victims, Towards Healing.

Mr Ellis was abused for five years by priest Father Aidan Duggan at Bass Hill in Sydney, starting in 1974, when Mr Ellis was 13.

The monsignor, who represented the church authority in Towards Healing, told the royal commission into child sexual abuse on Monday he had told then-archbishop Dr Pell that Mr Ellis wanted $100,000 to cover counselling and accommodation.

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Magdalene survivors seek compensation review

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Sixteen survivors of the Magdalene Laundries have sought a review of the amount of compensation they have been offered by the State.

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

According to figures released by the Department of Justice, 722 survivors have applied for redress, with 321 letters of formal offer having been issued.

To date, 238 survivors have accepted the offer, with 211 payments having been issued at a cost of in excess of €7.6m.

However, 16 women have formally asked for an internal review of the offer they have received. Of that number, five have been decided by the review officer, with one survivor currently appealing her offer to the Office of the Ombudsman.

Steven O’Riordan of the Magdalene Survivors Together has repeatedly expressed concern that survivors were being offered lesser amounts of compensation than they were entitled to due to the records of the Orders not matching the accounts of the women in terms of duration of stay.

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Bishop appointing morale booster for priests suffering ‘at coalface’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SARAH MACDONALD – UPDATED 17 MARCH 2014

Priests have “clearly suffered a lot” and need support structures to help raise their morale, the Catholic Bishop of Limerick has warned.

Speaking to the Irish Independent, Bishop Brendan Leahy revealed he has created two new offices in his diocese, one of which is aimed specifically at boosting priests’ morale as many of them are still reeling from the fallout of the abuse scandals.

Dr Leahy, who next month will celebrate his first year in office, said he has appointed Fr Muiris O’Connor as episcopal vicar for the pastoral care of priests.

It is an entirely new position and will be full-time, such is the importance of the role in the eyes of the bishop.

Comparing priests with a seismograph, Dr Leahy said priests are the ones registering the earthquake that is going through the church in terms of changes, new structures and a transition to a new era.

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Intellectually disabled man speaks of abuse by bus driver at Royal Commission in SA

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

An intellectually disabled man has told the Royal Commission he was abused by a paedophile bus driver at his Catholic school in the early 1990s. The Commission is sitting in Adelaide for the first time to investigate how the Catholic Church and South Australian police handled the case of paedophile bus driver Brian Perkins, and how the victims and their families have been affected.

Transcript

ELEANOR HALL: The sexual abuse Royal Commission is holding its first hearings in Adelaide today to investigate how the Catholic Church and the South Australian Police handled the case of a paedophile bus driver.

This morning an intellectually disabled man set out how he was abused by the paedophile bus driver, Brian Perkins, at his Catholic school in the early 1990s.

Sam Donovan is at the hearing in Adelaide and joins us now.

Sam, what did this first witness tell the hearing about what happened to him?

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: Well, it’s been very disturbing evidence, Eleanor.

The significance of the evidence of the witness known as LH is that of the 30 or so boys who were abused by Brian Perkins at St Anne’s School in the early 1990s, LH is pretty much the only one who has any power of speech. Most of the boys who were abused during those years were severely intellectually disabled and unable to describe what happened to them.

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Royal commission: Family fight Catholic Church after abuse by paedophile bus driver

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Nina Tietzel, Loukas Founten

The case of a paedophile school bus driver who abused dozens of intellectually disabled boys will be the focus of this week’s royal commission hearings in Adelaide.

Brian Perkins already had a criminal record for sexual abuse when he began working at St Ann’s Special School.

He sexually abused up to 30 boys in the late 1980s and early 1990s, including Peter Mitchell’s intellectually disabled son.

Mr Mitchell says the abuse of his son has scarred the whole family and he has called on the Catholic Church to end a 12-year civil case for compensation.

“I’ve had a heart attack since the allegations came out. My wife is on heavy doses of anti-depressants, as well as myself,” Mr Mitchell told the ABC.

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George Pell knew abuse victim wanted just $100,000, monsignor tells inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Monday 17 March 2014

Cardinal George Pell was told an abuse victim was seeking only $100,000 from the Catholic church, contrary to earlier evidence that Pell denied he knew the figure, a royal commission has heard.

The commission is examining John Ellis’s experiences when he approached the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney over sexual abuse by a priest between 1974 and 1979.

It heard last week that Ellis sought an ex-gratia payment of $100,000 because of needs arising from ongoing trauma following abuse by Father Aidan Duggan at Bass Hill.

Monsignor Brian Rayner, who was chancellor and vicar-general of the archdiocese between 2003 and 2005, told the inquiry on Monday he ran all financial matters by Pell. As such, he was Pell’s right-hand man in administrative affairs.

Asked by counsel for the commission Gail Furness SC whether he had told Pell that Ellis and his wife Nicola had asked for $100,000 for counselling and accommodation costs related to the impact of the abuse, Rayner replied: “Yes, he would have been told that.”

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Special school abuse Royal Commission: Mother tells of son’s nightmares and behavioural changes

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

BY COURT REPORTER CANDICE MARCUS, STAFF

March 17, 2014

The mother of an intellectually disabled boy abused by paedophile bus driver Brian Perkins has broken down on the witness stand at a royal commission hearing in Adelaide.

The woman’s son was one of many intellectually disabled boys molested by Perkins while they were students of St Ann’s Special School, run by the Catholic Church.

Perkins was not jailed until more than a decade after the abuse, and died in jail in 2009.

He already had a criminal record for sexual abuse when he began working at St Ann’s Special School, and sexually abused up to 30 boys in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Many of the other parents whose children were molested by Perkins did not find out until years later, the inquiry was told.

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“True Detective” vs. H.P. Lovecraft’s “cosmic horror”

UNITED STATES
Salon

The final message of the HBO series reinforces a dangerous American mythology — that the end justifies the means

JOSEPH LAYCOCK, RELIGION DISPATCHES

For the first seven episodes True Detective was actually a struggle between two modern and intertwined mythologies of evil. In last night’s finale one of those mythologies won in spectacular fashion.

Nic Pizzolatto constructed True Detective’s plot from a pair of sources, the first of which occurred in Ponchataoula, Louisiana, in 2005, when a former pastor told police that his church had turned from “Jesus to the devil.” He claimed they’d been holding Satanic rituals for years that involved animal sacrifice and the molestation of children. Or, as Jezebel put it in its headline, “Did a Horrifying Real Satanic Sex Abuse Case Inspire True Detective?”

While the case in Ponchataoula generated headlines about Satanic cults on both sides of the Atlantic, the details of Satanic worship were wholly invented. Accounts of black robes, blood orgies, and the rest appear to have been an “atrocity tale” in which accused child molesters sought to gain sympathy with claims of Satanic brainwashing. Buried in the bottom of one story about the case was a report from an FBI agent that no pentagrams or animal blood were found at the church—even with a “cult informant” guiding the investigation.

The second source is the book The King in Yellow, written in 1895 by Robert W. Chambers. Part of the fin de siècle decadence movement, this work is an anthology of horror stories about a fictional play called “The King in Yellow,” which renders anyone who reads it insane. Chambers presents snippets of this play that allude to a forbidden city called Carcosa—a trope first introduced by Ambrose Bierce in 1891. The King in Yellow mythology has since been invoked by H.P. Lovecraft and The Blue Oyster Cult.

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Sunshine Coast home to hundreds of sex offenders, says cop

AUSTRALIA
Northern Rivers Echo

Mark Furler 17th Mar 2014

A SUNSHINE Coast church accused of failing to take action against the man who killed Daniel Morcombe says it has removed four pedophiles from its congregation in recent years.

Two of those were sent to jail.

And a senior police officer, who has worked for more than 15 years in child protection and also attends the large Woombye church, said hundreds of registered sex offenders were living on the Sunshine Coast and thousands more across Queensland.

In 2011, during the Daniel Morcombe inquest, police revealed they had more than 500 new persons of interest in relation to Daniel.

At the time of Daniel’s disappearance there were reports, which police refused to confirm at the time, of more than 70 registered pedophiles in the Palmwoods-Woombye area.

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EXCLUSIVE…

LOUISIANA
Daily Mail (UK)

EXCLUSIVE: Babies in black dresses abused while laying in a Pentagram, drinking cat’s blood and Satanic writings on church walls: The twisted confessions of the pedophile pastor from Louisiana who inspired ‘True Detective’

By LAURA COLLINS IN AMITE, LOUISIANA

At 1.15pm on 16 May, 2005, Pastor Louis Lamonica Jr strolled into Detective Stan Carpenter’s office in Livingston, Louisiana and made his confession. What he had to say ‘floored’ the detective.

The pastor of Hosanna Church in nearby Hammond claimed he had performed satanic rituals, child abuse and animal sacrifice in the church and that he was not alone.

He named his fellow perpetrators and he named their child victims. It marked the beginning of the Hosanna Church Scandal and exposed a vicious pedophile ring in a case whose shockwaves reverberate in Lamonica’s former parish of Tangipahoe to this day.

This week writer Nic Pizzolatto, hinted that this case was his inspiration for HBO’s massive hit ‘True Detective,’ in which detectives Marty Hart and Rust Cohle, played by Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey, uncover a string of ritualistic satanic murders committed under the cover of a powerful evangelical establishment in South Louisiana.

Now, for the first time, MailOnline has seen the full shocking confession that fired the starting pistol on the most notorious scandal in recent Church history, reviewed hundreds of pages of Lamonica’s own writing and spoken to the officer who took the pastor’s confession that day.

Major Carpenter, 62, recalled: ‘Lamonica walked into my office and sat down, just as calm as you and me talking now.

‘I was Detective Supervisor at the time. When he came in he basically thought that after he told us what he did he was just going to go on about his business of the day.

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George Pell’s account of handling of abuse case contradicted

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 17, 2014

A SENIOR Catholic cleric has given a conflicting account to that of Cardinal George Pell about the church’s handling of a child sexual abuse case.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is currently investigating the case of John Ellis, a former altar boy who unsuccessfully attempted to sue the church after being abused by a Sydney priest.

During a private meeting in 2009, the commission heard, Cardinal Pell said he did not know Mr Ellis had previously offered to settle for a fraction of the roughly $1.5 million the church ultimately spent on the case.

An internal church file note of the meeting, tendered to the commission states: “The cardinal went on to indicate that he had no idea that Mr Ellis had sought an ex gratia payment of $100,000.”

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Royal Commission: Monsignor admits swearing ‘deceptive’ affidavit

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 17, 2014

Catherine Armitage
Senior Writer

A senior Catholic Church official has admitted he swore a “deceptive” and wrong affidavit for court proceedings in the John Ellis case, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to child sex abuse has heard.

The Archdiocese’s Chancellor, Monsignor Brian Rayner, apologised that an affidavit he swore in the court proceedings in 2004 was “deceptive”. He agreed he had information about the abuser Father Aidan Duggan’s appointments to the parish of Bass Hill between 1974 and 1978. Yet he had signed an affidavit conveying the impression the church had no evidence Father Duggan was at Bass Hill during the years Mr Ellis alleged he was abusing him there except for 1975. “If the affidavit is deceptive then I regret that aspect,” Monsignor Rayner said. He said he did not prepare it and did not read it carefully nor take the opportunity to correct it.

Sixteen years after they last had sexual contact, the former altar boy Mr Ellis visited Duggan at the Little Sisters of the Poor Nursing Home at Randwick.

The church had used the excuse that Duggan was too far gone in senile dementia to answer allegations against him as a basis for treating Mr Ellis’ claim of abuse as “uncorroborated”.

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March 16, 2014

Newark Archdiocese unveils policy for funerals of priests removed after sex abuse accusations

NEW JERSEY
The Record

MARCH 16, 2014

BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

Related: Letter from Bishop Edgar da Cunha to priests about the new archdiocese policy (PDF)

Related: Funeral arrangements policy (PDF)

The Archdiocese of Newark is rolling out a policy for the funerals of priests who were removed from ministry on sexual abuse accusations that it says caters to both the sensitivities of surviving victims and the clerics’ families.

But victims and their advocates say the policy, approved by Newark Archbishop John J. Myers, bends in favor of the offending priests, still providing them a celebratory funeral that all archdiocese clergy are encouraged to attend and in which they are buried in their liturgical robes.

The policy, sent to the archdiocese’s 961 Roman Catholic priests earlier this month, requires the funeral Mass to be held away from any churches where an offending priest worked or lived. It also stipulates that obituaries be stripped of photos and the time, date and location of funeral services.

Depending on their restrictions, the priests can be buried in their Mass vestments.

The policy applies only to priests who were removed from active ministry because a church review process concluded they had abused children.

An archdiocese official said in a letter to clergy this month that the policy was intended to protect the priests’ families and shield the church from further negative media coverage.

Jim Goodness, an archdiocese spokesman, played down the letter, saying the intention of the policy is to keep the funerals low-key, private affairs, out of communities where pain might be relived by those affected by alleged abusers.

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Royal Commission hearings start in Adelaide

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is sitting in Adelaide for the first time to investigate how the Catholic Church and South Australia Police handled the case of paedophile Brian Perkins who abused about 30 intellectually disabled children at St Ann’s Special School in the early 1990s. A lawyer acting for several of the families says the Church must explain why it failed to alert most of the families to the abuse and the police must justify why it took them nearly a decade to bring Perkins to justice

Transcript

CHRIS ULHMANN: This week, for the first time the Catholic Church will be asked to explain publicly why it failed to tell more than 20 families that their children may have been abused by a paedophile bus driver at St Ann’s Special School in Adelaide in the early 1990s.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is about to hold its first hearings in Adelaide and it’s not just the church that will face uncomfortable questions.

Samantha Donovan reports.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: In the early 1990s about 30 families began to notice dramatic changes in the behaviour of their sons who were attending the Catholic Church’s St Ann’s Special School in Adelaide.

Lawyer Peter Humphries.

PETER HUMPHRIES: Going from a child who was notwithstanding a disability, friendly and socialised, to someone who became very introspective, sexually aggressive, molesting immediate family members: step mothers, sisters and behaving very, very inappropriately in public and they were told in each case, no, the school had no knowledge of anything that might’ve accounted for that.

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Church urges abuse victims to adopt mediation over litigation

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with audio]

Francis Sullivan is the chief executive of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council which is coordinating the Catholic Church’s response to the Royal Commission. He spoke to AM about the about the St Ann’s case.

Transcript

CHRIS ULHMANN: Francis Sullivan is the chief executive of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council which is coordinating the Catholic Church’s response to the Royal Commission.

He spoke with Samantha Donovan about the St Ann’s case.

FRANCIS SULLIVAN: This is a horrible case and the Church’s handling in all its detail, forensic detail needs to be examined.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: One parent who AM has spoken to has an online petition with 88,000 signatures calling on the Church to settle his son’s compensation claim; why hasn’t the church settled the claim all these years later?

FRANCIS SULLIVAN: I’m not quite sure but one thing’s very important, is that litigation isn’t the way to best address sex abuse cases and I hope that all the families that have an action against the Church can take up the offer of getting into mediation so that compensation and settlement can happen quickly, not be in a protracted adversarial litigation process.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: It’s been more than 12 years though since some of these families lodged their claims for compensation, why is the Church taking so long?

FRANCIS SULLIVAN: I think the time period that this has taken is a matter of concern and again, the Church needs to explain how it has taken so long to get everything organised and addressed.

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Sex abuse royal commission in Adelaide

AUSTRALIA
Australian Teacher Magazine

ADELAIDE, March 17 – The royal commission into child sexual abuse is holding its first sitting in Adelaide to examine church and police responses to claims children were sexually abused at St Ann’s Special School.

The school’s former bus driver, Brian Perkins, was arrested in 2001 on charges of sexually abusing profoundly disabled children at the school.

He pleaded guilty to five offences involving three students, although as many as 30 children were understood to have been abused by him.

Perkins was sentenced to 10 years in jail, where he died in 2009.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will consider the responses by the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide and the South Australian police to the original allegations involving Perkins.

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Mid-Michigan Voice of the Faithful turns 10

MICHIGAN
Midland Daily News

Sunday, March 16, 2014

By Nancy Janoch, Nancy Rivet, Susan Dusseau and Harry Grether

This year, the local Catholic organization, Mid-Michigan Voice of the Faithful will be 10 years old.

Formed in the Tri-City area in 2004, this group is an affiliate of the organization that began in 2002 in Massachusetts as a response to the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church. Since then, it has grown to more than 30,000 members in the United States and in 21 countries. If many have never even heard of this group in the past years, some may ask how this is relevant to Catholics here in the Tri-City area?

When the first people joined together for VOTF, they were shocked, hurt and upset. They saw the great injustice of the sexual abuse by clergy and the following cover-up, and they demanded that changes begin in our church. VOTF became committed to a mission to provide a prayerful, Spirit-filled way for all Catholics to actively participate in the guidance and governance of the present-day Church. This follows Canon Law, which states that the laity “have the right and even at times the duty to manifest to the sacred pastors their opinion on matters which pertain to the good of the Church and to make their opinion known to the rest of the Christian faithful, without prejudice to the integrity of faith and morals, with reverence toward their pastors, and attentive to common advantage and the dignity of persons.” (Canon 212 §3)

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Another Pastoral and Public Relations Debacle for Archdiocese of Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change

MARCH 16, 2014 BY SUSAN MATTHEWS

The Philadelphia Archdiocese was a topic this morning on “Inside Story,” a local news show on ABC. The panel discussed the recent move by the Archdiocese to discontinue tuition-free education at archdiocesan schools for the children of clergy sex abuse victims. They uniformly agreed that it was mishandled – especially on the communications front. The “best case study of bad public relations,” said journalist Larry Platt. Sadly, the public relations response mirrors the pastoral response to victims. No one was buying the cost cutting argument, either. Renee Amore pointed out that the archdiocese paid for priests’ legal fees.

They went on to discuss the March 22 Healing Mass. When panel moderator Tamala Edwards asked communications strategist Jeff Jubelirer what he thought, his response was – And? Mass is nice, but what else? Panelists agreed that archdiocesan efforts are falling far short of expectations. Larry Platt commented on the lack of an ongoing archdiocesan program. That reminded me of the “Honesty, Healing and Hope in Christ: Confronting Sexual Violence in Our Archdiocese,” program Archbishop Chaput rolled out in May of 2012. The program was supposed to take place at the parish level and consist of four phases over six months. That went well. I’m sure it made an especially huge difference at Our Lady of Calvary as parents were left uninformed about their pastor Father John Paul.

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Assignment Record – Rev. James E. Jacobson, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: James E. Jacobson was ordained a priest of the Portland Province of the Society of Jesus in 1959. He lived and worked in remote Alaskan villages until 1976, when he went to Berkeley, California for what was to be a year-long sabbatical. His stay in the area was extended another three years, during which time he did community organizing in Oakland. He returned to Alaska in 1979 intending to organize native Alaskans, but was soon assigned to a chaplaincy at the state penitentiary in Salem, Oregon. His role there lasted until he was removed in 2005. Documents show that Jacobson’s superior and a Fairbanks bishop knew of “serious moral concerns” about Jacobson in 1967, including that he had fathered two children. Neither Jacobson, the Jesuits nor the diocese took responsibility for Jacobson’s offspring. In 2005 he was accused in a lawsuit of sexually assaulting two native Alaskan women, one in 1965 and the other in 1975. Both women gave birth to sons. DNA tests showed in 2005 that the children were Jacobson’s. He was subsequently removed from ministry and sent to live in a Jesuit residence in Spokane. In a 2006 lawsuit Jacobson was accused of raping a 16-year-old girl in 1967, in a remote Alaskan village. His accuser said she told two Jesuits at the time of the abuse, who did nothing in response. In 2007 Jacobson admitted to fathering four children, sexual involvement with seven Alaskan village women, and to visiting prostitutes during trips to Anchorage and Fairbanks.

Ordained: 1959

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Priest defended despite earlier abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 17, 2014

THE Catholic Church spent years disputing the account of an altar boy who claimed to have been sexually abused by a Sydney priest, despite having been told almost two decades earlier that the priest had abused another child.

The case, currently being investigated by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, sparked widespread controversy after the victim, John Ellis, lost his bid to sue the church in 2007.

Church documents tendered to the commission also show the priest, Aidan Duggan, worked as a chaplain in Sydney’s Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children and as “controller of a flourishing childcare centre” years after the first report of his abuse.

The Archdiocese of Sydney spent years contesting Mr Ellis’s claim to have been sexually abused during the 1970s on the basis that Duggan was too infirm to be interviewed and there was no record of any other allegation against him.

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George Pell can lift veil of secrecy around church sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 17, 2014

Frank Brennan

Cardinal George Pell is about to appear before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. He will face a detailed cross-examination under oath by Justice Peter McClellan and counsel assisting Gail Furness, SC. They will focus on the archdiocese of Sydney’s handling of the John Ellis case. But they will also take the opportunity to question Pell about the history of the Australian Catholic Church’s handling of abuse allegations.

Pell has often expressed his disgust and regret at the sexual abuse of children by church workers, especially priests. Since 1996, when he was appointed archbishop of Melbourne, Pell has worked hard to reduce the prospect of such abuse and to set in place procedures for helping victims and weeding out perpetrators. Initially, he decided to establish his own process in Melbourne, rather than working with the other bishops and religious leaders who were developing the Towards Healing protocol.

Pell has already faced the Victorian parliamentary inquiry into child abuse. Having been auxiliary bishop in Melbourne between 1987 and 1996, he told that inquiry: ”As an auxiliary bishop to Archbishop Little, I did not have the authority to handle these matters and had only some general impressions about the response that was being made at that time but this was sufficient to make it clear to me that this was an issue which needed urgent attention and that we needed to do much better in our response.”

The Victorian inquiry was critical of Frank Little and the Catholic Church processes before 1996. Many people inside and outside the church were left wondering if Archbishop Little didn’t respond adequately between 1987 and 1996, why didn’t his auxiliary bishop, Pell, do something? And if the archbishop knew during those nine years, why didn’t his auxiliary?

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Bishop Wright’s call to forgive angers parishoners

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE McCARTHY March 16, 2014

MAITLAND-Newcastle Catholic Bishop Bill Wright has stunned parishioners by urging a community to forgive a ‘‘repentant’’ priest because ‘‘there is more joy in heaven over one repentant sinner than 99 just people’’.

Bishop Wright, named as a possible replacement for Cardinal George Pell in the Sydney archdiocese, reinstated Father Des Harrigan to Taree in September last year despite noting the likelihood of ‘‘concern and distress’’ among some parishioners about the priest’s conduct.

In a letter of ‘‘reinstatement and support for Father Des Harrigan’’ read out at all Taree church services in September, the bishop asked parishioners to ‘‘look at these matters not with the mind of those who demand nothing less than perfection from anyone professing to be Christian, but according to the mind of Christ who teaches us there is more joy in heaven over one repentant sinner than 99 just people’’.

‘‘Where people fail to live up to the expectations of their position but are forthright in acknowledging their responsibilities and truly repentant, our faith tells us there is forgiveness and we are given second chances,’’ Bishop Wright wrote.

In a statement last week, the diocese noted Father Harrigan ‘‘chose to refrain from entering schools and giving homilies’’ after his evidence to the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry in July about owning adult male pornography. The diocese confirmed he had also been the subject of complaints about his ‘‘temperament and style’’. Father Harrigan has not been the subject of any child sexual abuse allegations.

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Pastor in Perris arrested on suspicion of rape

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

By Ruben Vives
March 14, 2014

A Riverside County pastor has been arrested on suspicion of rape, and authorities are searching for other possible victims.

Jerome Anthony Clay Sr. — who is pastor of Compassion Church in Perris — was arrested Thursday after a search warrant was served at his home in the 400 block of Perris Boulevard, just around the corner from the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department.

Investigators also searched Compassion Church at 190 E. 5th Street, according to the Sheriff’s Department, which is under contract to provide policing services for the city of Perris.

Clay, 41, is being held at the South West Detention Center in Murrieta in leiu of $55,000 bail.

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PERRIS: Pastor accused of rape is arrested

CALIFORNIA
The Press-Enterprise

MARCH 13, 2014 BY MICHAEL WATANABE

A Perris pastor has been arrested on suspicion of rape, and Riverside County sheriff’s officials believe there are more victims.

Jerome Anthony Clay Sr., 41, of Perris, was arrested at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, March 13, at his home in the 400 block of South Perris Boulevard in Perris after sheriff’s officials served search warrants at the residence and at Compassion Church at 190 E. 5th St. in Perris, according to a sheriff’s news release.

He was booked into the Southwest Detention Center in French Valley on suspicion of rape, oral copulation with a person under 16, and sexual penetration by force, booking records show. He is being held in lieu of $110,000 bail.

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Perris pastor arrested for rape of minor

CALIFORNIA
KABC

By Abc7.com staff

PERRIS, Calif. (KABC) — A pastor in Riverside County has been arrested for rape and other sex crimes, and investigators say there may be more victims.

Jerome Anthony Clay Sr., a pastor at Compassion Church in Perris, is charged with raping a person under the age of 16. Authorities did not say whether the victim was a church member.

Clay, 41, was taken into custody Thursday after search warrants were served at his church and his home in the 400 block of Perris Boulevard. He is being held on $110,000 bail and is expected in court on March 17.

Perris residents had mixed reactions to the news.

“There was a lot of bad stuff that goes on at this church, they say it doesn’t, but it does,” Jordan Egbert said.

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Jason Day ratifica testimonio sobre intento de abuso sexual en entrevista con La República

PERU
La Republica

[Summary: Actor Jason Day has ratified his statements that a priest attempted to sexually abuse him when he was a child. He said he has told his story publicly to support other victims. Day said he family was aware of the attempted abuse but chose not to report it.]

Y cuenta detalles sobre iniciativa que emprende para apoyar a otras víctimas.
Mañana, en el diario La República, usted podrá leer una entrevista al actor Jason Day donde ratifica que un sacerdote intentó abusar sexualmente de él cuando era niño.

Day revela que su familia sí estaba enterada del hecho, pero optó por no denunciarlo. Además, asegura que el sacerdote involucrado conocía a sus parientes.

“El cura de mi primera comunión no solo me conocía a mí, sino a mis dos hermanos y a mi primo. No se acuerda de mí, ¿pero sí de los demás?”, cuestionó.

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Middle school band director arrested on child molestation charges

GEORGIA
Action News Jax

[with video]

DARIEN, Ga. — A middle school band director has been arrested on child molestation charges, and police are investigating whether there are more potential victims.

James Ray Clark Jr. is being held at the McIntosh County Sheriff’s Office on charges of aggravated child molestation and criminal attempt to commit statutory rape after two people claim he sexually assaulted them decades ago.

The Darien Police Department said the investigation began when a person came forward to say they had been assaulted by Clark in 2000-2001 while he worked as a youth minister at the Loganville First United Methodist Church.

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Glynn County band director charged with child molestation, police say

GEORGIA
Florida Times-Union

By Terry Dickson

A Darien man who was working until Tuesday as a middle school band director in Glynn County has been arrested on charges of child molestation and attempt to commit statutory rape, the Darien police said.

The Darien Police Department initiated an investigation after receiving a call from someone who said they had been sexually assaulted between 2000 and 2001 in Loganville, Ga., while the suspect was working there as a Methodist youth minister, Darien police Lt. Nick Roundtree said in a prepared release.

The 26-year-old man who said he is a victim said he contacted police in Darien, where he learned the man was living, because he heard the man was working as a band director at Jane Macon Middle School in Glynn County, Roundtree said.

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Former Loganville pastor charged with child molestation

GEORGIA
Walton Tribune

By Robbie Schwartz

A former youth pastor at Loganville United Methodist Church is behind bars after his arrest Tuesday on charges of aggravated child molestation and criminal attempt to commit statutory rape. The investigation began with an alleged victim from Loganville.

The incidents reportedly took place between 2000-2001 and involved James Ray Clark Jr., 48, now a resident of Darien, and Chris Childs, 27, who was 13 years old when the alleged sexual assaults began. He went public with the incidents in a story in the Mayport (Fla.) Mirror.

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Attorney asks to separate charges against CG man

ARIZONA
Case Grande Dispatch

The attorney for a Casa Grande man accused of two counts of sexual abuse has asked that the two cases be severed.

Tempe attorney J. Scott Halverson filed a motion to sever the two charges against Florentino Tarango. Tarango was charged in connection with incidents related to his position as a deacon at St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church.

In his Feb. 21 motion, Halverson wrote that the two counts should be separated because one incident is alleged to have occurred in the fall of 2009 and the second allegedly occurred in May 2013. And, he wrote, the 2009 incident wasn’t reported to police until after the 2013 incident had been reported.

Tarango has a right to sever, Halverson wrote, because evidence from the 2009 allegation would not be admissible in the trial of the 2013 alleged incident if the first offense had been reported earlier and a trial held.

The Pinal County Attorney’s Office responded in another motion, asking that the judge deny the motion to sever the cases.

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Christine Buckley

IRELAND
Irish Independent

EAMON DELANEY – PUBLISHED 16 MARCH 2014

Christine Buckley was one of those who lifted the covers on an ugly chapter in Ireland’s history and forced the country to confront the reality of its reputation as a Republic which protected children and the vulnerable.

The physical and sexual abuse of children supposedly in care in religious and state institutions had been known for decades, but the abuse was either ignored or denied by the authorities. Christine was determined to put this right and to tell the world about her own torment and that of countless others.

In 1992, she did an RTE radio interview with Gay Byrne in which she first publicly described how she was physically abused as a child in Dublin’s Goldenbridge orph- anage, which was run by the Sisters of Mercy.

The early Nineties were a time of momentous change and confrontation in Irish society in these areas and in matters of Catholic and state conservatism. 1992 was also the year of the X Case, in a divided State in which family planning, divorce and homosexuality were all illegal. The fact that the religious ethos that informed such conservatism was also harbouring a pattern of secretive, systematic abuse was especially strange and galling.

In 1996, Christine’s story featured in Louis Lentin’s ground-breaking drama documentary Dear Daughter which shocked the nation with its detailed account of the abuses at Goldenbridge. In one incident a kettle of boiling water was poured over the legs of a 10-year-old Christine. On another occasion, she had to get almost 100 stitches in her leg, after being beaten so badly by an unidentified nun.

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Why Catholic Church still gets picked on

UNITED STATES
Pocono Record

March 16, 2014

“When you go in through those doors, it is supposed to be a spiritual, wholesome place. .. You don’t know who you’re listening to anymore … It’s like using the word of God for other purposes.” — Roman Catholic Jose Soto, 44, talking to Fox News in Arecito, Puerto Rico

Pope Francis and the American Cardinal Timothy Dolan recently expressed puzzlement as to why the Roman Catholic Church has been singled out by ongoing criticism over child sex abuse.

The pope told an Italian newspaper that the Catholic Church “is perhaps the only public institution that has moved with transparency and responsibility” to ferret out abusers and address the problem. “No one has done more,” the pope said, “and yet the church is the only one to have been attacked.” Later on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” the cardinal said he cheered the pope’s words. Then, claiming to speak for lay Catholics, he said Catholics, too, wonder why the church is being picked on when in recent years it’s been “an example of what to do.”

Surely these two highly educated, distinguished scholars and leaders of the Catholic faith understand all too well why the church continues to be singled out for criticism. Yes, child sexual abuse occurs across society, but when it’s discovered, the perpetrators are prosecuted. That wasn’t true for many, many decades in the Catholic Church, as reports of long-ago, ignored child sex abuse show

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March 15, 2014

Pope Francis, Cardinal Mahony, President Obama & US Elections

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

There are many needed reform actions Pope Francis has failed even to initiate after one year. The worst failure has been his avoiding making cardinals and bishops accountable for aiding predatory priests who hurt defenseless children. Kissing dozens of babies and washing prisoners’ feet make great photo ops, but fail to protect one defenseless child or comfort one abuse survivor.

President Obama will meet for the first time in less than two weeks on March 27 with Pope Francis. Obama can be expected to address this failure directly in private. Obama also needs to try to focus Francis on Russia’s President Putin. Francis recently, and perhaps naively, enhanced Putin’s prestige by welcoming him to the Vatican in a well publicized photo op. With Russia’s virtual invasion of Ukraine, Francis’ approach to Putin warrants a close review, as Germany’s concerned Chancellor Merkel would likely as well encourage Francis to undertake. She even may already have done so privately.

Please see my related recent Advice to President Obama on Pope Francis’ strategy here

[Christian Catholicism]

While it may be debatable who has been the worst of the Catholic Church’s predator protecting hierarchs, Los Angeles’ Cardinal Mahony arguably tops the list. Almost a billion dollars of LA Catholics’ contributions have been needlessly expended so far on settling claims related to abusive priests that Mahony should, and in many cases probably could, have curtailed. He also seemingly wasted almost another 200 million dollars on an unnecessary new LA cathedral, the so called “Raj Mahal”, apparently mainly to satisfy his “edifice complex”.

On the day the UN Committee recently blasted the Vatican on its decades of child abuse prevention failures, Pope Francis said Mass with Mahony and then met privately with him. They discussed US Latino politically related issues, but not the priest child abuse scandal, per Mahony’s own personal website. Then again, who is the Pope to judge?

When the LA abuse scandal uproar was being widely reported a year ago as damning documents were then revealed about Mahony’s extensive complicity, LA’s Archbishop Gomez went through a well publicized “distancing” of the LA Archdiocese from any further active ministry for Mahony. So what’s the “good Cardinal” up to now?

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Legal costs escalate in Kansas City diocese

MISSOURI
KMBC

KANSAS CITY, Mo. —The Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese is not considering bankruptcy, despite having paid millions of dollars for legal fees and settlements in sexual abuse cases involving priests in recent years, a diocese spokesman said.

The diocese has paid $6 million in settlements on sex abuse cases since May, as well as $7 million on legal fees for sex abuse cases in the last two fiscal years. And it still faces more than two dozen sexual abuse lawsuits and a breach-of-contract case filed by plaintiffs who settled with the diocese for $10 million in 2008, The Kansas City Star reported.

Those costs have raised concerns about possible bankruptcy among parishioners, including a group that has petitioned Pope Francis to remove Bishop Robert Finn for his handling of the sexual abuse allegations.

“Among the active and retired clergy, there is a genuine and sincere concern of diocesan bankruptcy,” said Jeff Weis, a Kansas City Catholic who started a petition drive seeking Finn’s removal. “There’s a fear that this diocese is being driven into the ground financially.”

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JP2 Army in Puerto Rico! Plague of Pedophile Priests in Latin America! John Paul II the Patron Saint of Pedophiles, Pederasts & Rapists-Priests

UNITED STATES
Pope Francis the CON Christ.

Paris Arrow

Puerto Ricans must stop calling priests “Padre” and reserve this title only to their husbands and fathers of their children

Children must call “Father” – only their own biological fathers oradoptive fathers – and they must not give away this unique paternal title and allegiance to other men on earth.

Children must call “Father” – only their own biological fathers oradoptive fathers – because these lay men alone deserve this unique title which they have rightfully earned through their daily labour and lifetime dedication.

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Staten Island man accused of molesting, rubbing meat on teen girl during ‘spiritual cleansing’

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By John M. Annese/Staten Island Advance
on March 13, 2014

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — A “spiritual reader” from Port Richmond is accused of sexually abusing a 15-year-old girl by rubbing her body with raw steak and molesting her during a supposed ritual to ward off evil spirits.

Rafael Paulino, 42, conducted what he described to detectives as a “spiritual cleansing” inside an apartment on Scribner Avenue in New Brighton, authorities allege.

Paulino, who lives on Bryson Avenue, has a business card with the name Omi Chango’, an image of Christ, and the words “priest” and “spiritual leader” printed on it, according to a law enforcement source familiar with the case.

The source couldn’t say if “Omi Chango'” was meant to be an assumed name, or a reference to “Chango,” a deity worshiped by followers of Santeria.

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