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.

June 27, 2014

Vatican Ex-Ambassador Convicted of Sex Abuse

VATICAN CITY
ABC News

VATICAN CITY — Jun 27, 2014

Associated Press

The Vatican’s former ambassador to the Dominican Republic has been convicted by a church tribunal of sex abuse and has been defrocked, the first such sentence handed down against a top papal representative.

The Vatican said Friday that Monsignor Jozef Wesolowski was found guilty by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and sentenced to the harshest penalty possible against a cleric: laicization, meaning he can no longer perform priestly duties or present himself as a priest.

Wesolowski can appeal. He also faces other charges by the criminal tribunal of Vatican City, since as a papal diplomat he is considered a citizen of the tiny city state.

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.

Argentine Victims and the Pope’s Meeting: An Opportunity

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Pope Francis has announced he will meet soon with clergy sexual abuse victims, and the Irish Catholic reported on June 26 that the meeting will be held “next week” in Rome, and will include survivors from Ireland, Britain, the United States, and Poland. Reporter Michael Kelly leaves open the possibility that survivors from other countries will also attend.

It is urgent that survivors from Argentina be included in the meeting, for two reasons. First, in the global Catholic Church so powerfully expressed by the papacy of Pope Francis, the sexual abuse of children is a global problem not restricted to the developed world. Second, Argentine survivors asked to meet with Pope Francis when he was the Archbishop of Buenos Aires and president of the Argentine bishops’ conference. Unfortunately, Cardinal Bergoglio consistently ignored those requests.

He will no doubt handle his first meeting with survivors in an apparently open and engaging way, but the seriousness of his engagement is in question. In his 21 years as bishop and archbishop, the Wall Street Journal reports, including the years when he headed the Argentine bishops’ conference, he “declined to meet with victims of sexual abuse, according to the victims and a spokesman for the Buenos Aires archdiocese.”

The upcoming meeting will be more effective if the pope includes in it Argentine survivors whose communications he ignored. By inviting these particular survivors, Pope Francis would signal his intention that the Vatican meeting be hard-hitting, and he would immediately improve the grim situation of victims in his home country. Just last year in Argentina, a church attorney defended a cardinal’s deliberate concealment of a prolific abuser, saying the children’s parents should have called the police; and anotherbishop argued in court that a mother who had allowed her son to stay overnight at a priest’s home was partly responsible for the boy’s abuse.

On this page, we profile the Argentine survivors whose inclusion in the Vatican meeting would be beneficial. Each of them sought Pope Francis’s help, and none received a reply. All of them tried to contact the cardinal archbishop in 2002 or later – years when many bishops in the US and Europe disclosed numbers and names of abusive clergy, and when Pope Benedict issued repeated apologies [1, 2, 3, and 4] and met with victims five times, in the US, Australia, Malta, the United Kingdom, and Benedict’s home country, Germany.

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.

Was Jimmy Savile The Other Yorkshire Ripper?

UNITED KINGDOM
Bock the Robber

In a previous post, I pointed out that Jimmy Savile and Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper, were close friends, but how close has yet to be established.

Certainly, they had much in common: both were psychopaths with a tendency to violence and a hatred of women. Not only that, but both of them were questioned by the police during the Ripper investigation and indeed, one of the murder victims was found very close to Savile’s flat.

Here’s what Sutcliffe said in his defence.

Oh that’s a load of rubbish. It’s a load of crap. People were always there. He was never alone with anybody. He never did anything at Broadmoor. They’re just getting carried away. They’re going right over the top with it. They’re all jumping on the bandwagon. He’d always come and chat and I’d introduce him to my visitors. Several times he left £500 for charities I was supporting. He wrote cheques out on the spot. A very generous man he was. I can’t fault him for what he was like from my experiences anyway. I don’t care what these people who who are coming out of the woodwork are saying, you know? It takes a couples of rumours then it goes like wildfire, don’t it? I don’t believe he raped anybody. I think he’s kissed quite a few young women, but that’s as far as he’s gone. No, it’s just kind of crazy, you know? They’re just [interested in] savaging people who are dead, you know? People who can’t hit back or prisoners who can’t reply, you know?

Savile had living quarters in Broadmoor psychiatric hospital, and also at Stoke Mandeville. He had the run of these institutions, with unlimited access to every part of them, including the morgues, where, among other things, he took indecent photos of dead people.

Besides that, he was able to abuse nurses with impunity, in the certain knowledge that senior doctors would dismiss their complaints, which is what happened. His victims, we now know, ranged in age from 5 to 75, with his last crimes committed at the age of 82.

Not only was a Jimmy Savile an abuser, but a necrophiliac as well. He was a close friend of Peter Sutcliffe, and we know that the police regarded him as sufficiently important to interview about the Ripper murders.

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.

Monsignor Steven J. Raica named fifth Bishop of Gaylord

MICHIGAN
Roman Catholic Diocese of Lansing

Pope Francis has appointed Monsignor Steven J Raica, chancellor of the Diocese of Lansing, as the Fifth Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gaylord. The Holy Father’s appointment was announced on Friday, June 27 at 6:00am EDT at the Vatican. The date of Bishop-elect Raica’s consecration and installation will be Thursday, August 28 at St Mary Cathedral, Gaylord.

“As I prepare myself to serve the People of God in the northern part of Michigan’s Lower Peninsula as a new bishop, I offer my praise and gratitude to the Lord Jesus whose presence in my life has enabled me to experience an abundance of life,” said Bishop-elect Raica in a statement. “My gratitude also goes to Pope Francis for entrusting me with this honor and great responsibility. The priests, religious, colleagues in ministry and the faithful with whom I have been privileged to journey in faith here in the Diocese of Lansing have been true companions reminding me of the Lord’s love and mercy. I beg for their prayers that I may serve the Lord totally and faithfully in this new ministerial chapter of my life.” click here for full statement from Bishop-elect Raica

Bishop Earl Boyea of the Diocese of Lansing in a statement said “Bishop-elect Raica is a good priest, a good friend, and a man of good counsel. Our loss is Gaylord’s gain! He is gentle, considerate, and solid in his pastoral abilities. He has demonstrated his ability to be a keen collaborator. The office of bishop is not one to be sought, and he did not seek it. Many trials and crosses present themselves to the holder of this office, but his ability to engage others and work with them will stand him in good stead. This new bishop will be an intelligent, cultured, pastoral, gentle, and faith-filled leader of the Church in the northern Lower Peninsula as their chief shepherd, the presence of the apostles and of Jesus Christ the High Priest. The entire Diocese of Lansing offers him our heartiest congratulations and prayers!” click here for full statement from Bishop Earl Boyea

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.

Nomina del Vescovo di Gaylord (U.S.A.)

CITTA DEL VATICANO
Bolletino

Il Santo Padre Francesco ha nominato Vescovo di Gaylord (U.S.A.) Mons. Steven John Raica, del clero della diocesi di Lansing, finora Cancelliere della medesima sede.

Mons. Steven John Raica

Mons. Steven John Raica è nato l’8 novembre 1952 a Munising, nella diocesi di Marquette (Michigan). Dopo aver frequentato la “Sacred Heart Elementary School” e la “William G. Mather High School”, ha ottenuto il Baccalaureato in Matematica presso la “Michigan State University” ad East Lansing (1973). Ha svolto gli studi teologici presso il “Saint John Provincial Seminary” a Plymouth (1973-1977). Successivamente ha ottenuto il “Master of Arts” in “Religious Studies” presso l’”University of Detroit” (1978) e, poi, la Licenza (1990) e il Dottorato (1996) in Diritto Canonico presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana a Roma.

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.

All Balyo’s contact with kids investigated

MICHIGAN
WOOD

By Susan Samples
Published: June 26, 2014

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (WOOD) — Federal investigators say they have heard from several people who are concerned a longtime Christian radio host accused of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old may have also targeted their children.

John Balyo, 35, is charged with one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and one count of second degree criminal sexual conduct. He allegedly admitted to investigators that he sexually assaulted an 11-year-old boy in Battle Creek in May. He also allegedly pointed them to his storage unit, which contained what federal investigators called a “bondage kit.”

Homeland Security Investigations, Michigan State Police and the Battle Creek Police Department continue their investigation into the former WCSG morning show host.

One week after his arrest, authorities said they have received “several” calls from people who worry Balyo may have acted inappropriately with their children.

Kenneth Duke, resident agent in charge of Homeland Security Investigations, says authorities will investigate every single call — and that’s just the beginning.

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.

Irish government finalizes terms of inquiry into mother-baby homes

IRELAND
Georgia Bulletin

By MICHAEL KELLY, Catholic News Service | Published June 26, 2014

DUBLIN (CNS)—The Irish government is finalizing the parameters of a judicial inquiry into church-run state-funded mother and baby homes.

The inquiry comes amid increased disquiet about some of the reporting of the original story of St. Mary’s Home in Tuam, run by the Bon Secours congregation of nuns.

In May, local historian Catherine Corless revealed her research, which found that between 1925 and 1961, 976 infants died in the home for unmarried mothers and their children. She had found no evidence that they were buried in local cemeteries and instead believed that the children may have been buried in a common grave on the site.

However, several media outlets began reporting that the children had been “dumped” in a disused septic tank on the site. Within days, the international media was gripped by the story—much of which turned out to be factually inaccurate.

Dublin Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has expressed support for a judicial inquiry.

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 trouble with calling the Tuam scandal a hoax

IRELAND
Irish Central

Cahir O’Doherty @irishcentral June 27,2014

This week Catholic League president Bill Donohue, in a carefully crafted 16 page denunciation, blasted what he called the “hoax” and “mass hysteria” surrounding some reports about the Tuam, County Galway mothers and babies home scandal.

But with 796 infant deaths already a matter of public record, Donohue was left to object to the way some outlets had reported the news, but not the facts. It was a classic case of semantics versus substance, and about as illuminating.

Free-associating like a 1950’s beat poet, Donohue then rounded up the usual suspects for another round of scalding invective.

“Fresh off the heels of horror stories about the Magdalene Laundries, and the torment of Philomena Lee (as recorded in the film, “Philomena”) the public is reeling from the latest report of abuse at the hands of cruel nuns,” he wrote. But none of the claims made about Tuam are true,” he added.

“There is no mass grave. Women were not abused by nuns in the Magdalene Laundries. And Philomena’s son was never taken from her and then sold to the highest bidder.”

Nothing to see here except anti-Catholic bias. Forget the recent UN The Committee Against Torture recommendations. You can all go home now, folks.

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 had a record when he arrived in S.A.

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

BY ABE LEVY : JUNE 26, 2014

SAN ANTONIO — The Archdiocese of San Antonio has deemed credible a woman’s recent claim that a priest sexually abused her in the late 1970s when she was a girl, according to notices it circulated this month in its newspaper, its website and at two parishes.

The archdiocese said it discovered that a now-deceased priest who had worked here at that time had a record — convicted of child rape and of an attempted rape of an adult.

But Father Bruce MacArthur’s record, according to lawsuit depositions, was far more extensive than that. And his supervising bishops, including, for a time, San Antonio Archbishop Patrick Flores, knew quite a lot about it.

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.

State opposes Robinson’s early release

OHIO
Toledo Blade

JENNIFER FEEHAN
BLADE STAFF WRITER

The Ohio Attorney General’s Office on Thursday filed its opposition to Gerald Robinson’s request that he be released from prison because he is dying.

Hilda Rosenberg, an assistant state attorney general, said Robinson has no legal claim to be allowed to return home to Toledo, and urged a U.S. District judge to deny his request for a compassionate release.

Robinson, 76, was convicted of murder in 2006 by a Lucas County Common Pleas Court jury for the 1980 slaying of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl in the sacristy of the former Mercy Hospital chapel. He was sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility after 15 years.

Last week, his attorney, Rick Kerger, asked a federal judge to release Robinson to the Little Sisters of the Poor or to Robinson’s brother and sister-in-law in Toledo, although Mr. Kerger subsequently amended his petition to say that the Little Sisters of the Poor had not agreed to care for Robinson. The former priest is in a hospice unit at Franklin Medical Center, a Columbus hospital run by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

Robinson, Ms. Rosenberg wrote in her response to the petition for release, “committed a particularly gruesome crime — murder — which the Ohio legislature has determined precludes consideration of compassionate release. [Robinson] does not assert that his care in the prison hospice facility is lacking in any way. He does not argue that his medical needs are not being met or that he is being treated inhumanely.”

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.

How BBC star Jimmy Savile got away …

UNITED KINGDOM
Washington Post

How BBC star Jimmy Savile got away with allegedly abusing 500 children and sex with dead bodies

BY TERRENCE MCCOY June 27

Jimmy Savile was never a handsome man. His face, even in his early days at the BBC, was all sharp edges — the hook of his nose, the jagged-tooth grin, the boggle-eyed look of eccentricity, humor and derangement. At times, he seemed almost make believe. He had platinum hair. A fat cigar perpetually hung out of his mouth. He seemed to communicate exclusively in catchphrases: “now then, now then,” “howzabout that then,” “as it ‘appens.” The kids just loved his gags.

There was always something off about Savile, who hosted the BBC’s “Jim’ll Fix it,” palled around with the royal family, reportedly spent Christmases with the Thatchers, and was knighted not only by Queen Elizabeth but by Pope John Paul II. But most forgave his idiosyncratic nature. He was, after all, a great man. He raised $5.2 million for a hospital in Leeds, one of the United Kingdom’s largest. He volunteered countless hours as a hospital aide, busing patients to and fro. He helped scores of young doctors get their starts.

Sure, there were rumors. Whispers that he wasn’t everything he seemed. Murmurs he was really a sexual predator and had abused dozens of children. But they never stuck. Not Jimmy Savile, people told themselves — not “fix-it Jim.”

On October 29, 2011, Savile died at his home in Leeds. “Most of all, I remember him as just a totally flamboyant, over-the-top, larger-than-life character,” radio presenter David Hamilton told the Guardian, praising his “tireless” philanthropy. “And as he was on the air, he was just the same off.”

But he wasn’t. And just how wrong that that assessment was emerged this month.

Savile, according to a U.K. National Health Service investigation released Thursday, was a prolific pedophile. The health service investigation only confirmed behavior described in several earlier probes since his death. In all, Savile is believed to have abused at least 500 girls and boys, some as young as two, most between 13 and 15, as well as countless adults ranging up to 75 years old. With unfettered access to Leeds General Infirmary, the health service report said, he raped and fondled boys, girls, men and women in offices and corridors. He also allegedly committed sexual acts on dead bodies, and even told several hospital workers that he made jewelry out of one man’s glass eyeball.

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.

Jimmy Savile …

UNITED KINGDOM
Bedfordshire on Sunday

Jimmy Savile reports uncover shocking details about the late TV presenter and DJ who has been linked to a Catholic boys’ home in Shefford, Bedfordshire

Written by JULIA SUTTON

JIMMY Savile abused corpses as well as sexually assaulted patients aged from five to 75 in NHS hospitals after decades of unrestricted access, investigators claim.

The reports into the former BBC DJ, who also presented Jim’ll Fix It and Top of the Pops, cover 28 hospitals including Leeds General Infirmary and Broadmoor psychiatric hospital.

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt admitted the shocking revelations ‘will shake our country to the core’.
Savile, died aged 84 in October 2011 – a year before allegations that he had sexually abused children came to light. …

Bedfordshire on Sunday has been following the case as the TV personality has also been connected to a former Catholic boys’ home in Shefford, Bedfordshire.

St Francis House closed in 1973 and this newspaper has revealed that Savile used to visit the home, as there was a Catholic Church on the site, which is still open.

Savile was a devout Catholic and visited when staying at nearby Henlow Grange.

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Protestant Church Faces New Sex-Abuse Scandal …

UNITED STATES
Democracy Now

Protestant Church Faces New Sex-Abuse Scandal as Victims Defy Threats, Censorship to Speak Out

Is the Protestant world is teetering on the edge of a sex-abuse scandal similar to the one that rocked the Catholic Church? We are joined by reporter Kathryn Joyce, whose cover story in The American Prospect profiles Boz Tchividjian, a law professor at Liberty University — a school founded by Reverend Jerry Falwell — and former prosecutor who worked on many sexual abuse cases. Tchividjian used his experience to found GRACE — Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment. GRACE made headlines in February when the famous evangelical school, Bob Jones University, hired it to interview faculty and students about their experiences with sexual assault, then fired it before the it had a chance to report the results — only to hire it back after a public outcry. Tchividjian is the grandson of the famous evangelist, Rev. Billy Graham.

TRANSCRIPT

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to a new exposé that asks if the Protestant world is teetering on the edge of a sex-abuse scandal similar to the one that has rocked the Catholic Church. The person trying to address the problem may surprise you. As sex-abuse allegations multiply, it is Reverend Billy Graham’s grandson who is on a mission to persuade Protestant churches to come clean. Kathryn Joyce’s cover story in The American Prospect profiles Boz Tchividjian, a law professor at Liberty University, a school founded by Reverend Jerry Falwell, and former prosecutor who has worked on many sex-abuse cases. He used his experience to found an organization called GRACE: Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment.

AMY GOODMAN: GRACE made headlines in February when the famous evangelical school, Bob Jones University, hired it to interview faculty and students about their experiences with sexual assault, then fired it before it had a chance to report the results, only to hire it back after a public outcry. Well, reporter Kathryn Joyce joins us now to discuss this major exposé, “By Grace Alone: As Sex-Abuse Allegations Multiply, Billy Graham’s Grandson is on a Mission to Persuade Protestant Churches to Come Clean.” Kathryn Joyce is also the author of The Child Catchers: Rescue, Trafficking, and the New Gospel of Adoption and Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement.

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John Furlong, Rugby Canada bid to host international event in Vancouver

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

SUNNY DHILLON
VANCOUVER — The Globe and Mail
Published Wednesday, Jun. 25 2014

Rugby Canada has submitted a bid to hold a major international competition in Vancouver – a process that was co-chaired by 2010 Winter Olympics head John Furlong.

Mr. Furlong – who has made few public appearances since he was accused of assaulting students when he was a physical-education teacher in a small B.C. community four decades ago – called it an honour to work on the bid and again help elevate Vancouver and Canada onto the world sporting stage.

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.

REBUTTAL TO “In his ministry, Pope Francis’ achievements are substantial, not merely empty symbolism”…

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

June 26, 2014

Paris Arrow

The monsignor pastor emeritus should know like any child and everybody would know that symbolism is NOT substance. All those giant statues of John Paul II in all Catholic churches are symbols of the invisible pope and are not his substance. The huge and probably biggest statue of Christ on top of a hill in Rio de Janeiro (where the FIFA soccer is now happening) is not the person or substance of Jesus but a symbol of Christ. The biggest Catholic gesture of popes and priests of course is the Eucharist where Canon Law claims that “at their consecration become the body and blood of Christ while keeping only the appearances of bread and wine”. All those popes in the Vatican billions of dollars temple and those Opus Dei priests and Jesuit priests and all millionaire priests who stand to inherit the Vatican Billions can NEVER instantly re-produce the passion and death of Christ in Jerusalem (with a few Catholic words of manmade transubstantiation) because Christ was whipped with hundreds or thousands of lashes and he bore those wounds as he carried his cross to Calvary and died a painful death hanging on the cross – while the fat well-fed golden cow Pope Francis and all priests sit in the lap of theological luxury! The biggest Catholic symbol of course is the white host in the Eucharist – which is a symbol and NOT the substance of Christ‘s flesh-and-blood because popes and priests cannot clone an ant or a dog or a star and therefore they cannot clone Jesus Christ the Son of the Creator of the Universe! The Eucharist is the apex of Satanic Mass and the most preposterous sorcery and magic that’s less entertaining as Harry Potter.

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.

Cops: West suburban pastor abused boy for 6 years

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By Jeremy Gorner
Tribune reporter
9:18 p.m. CDT, June 26, 2014

A pastor of a suburban church is accused of molesting a boy for years while he attended the congregation – starting when the child was about 8 years old, authorities allege.

The Rev. John Hays, the director of congregation life for the First Presbyterian Church of River Forest, was arrested today by Chicago police and charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse. Hays is alleged to have fondled the victim from February 2003 through February 2009, according to Chicago police Officer Ana Pacheco, a police spokeswoman.

Investigators began looking into Hays, 57, in late May after the victim, now 19, reported the abuse to authorities, authorities said.

Authorities said the victim and his parents attended the church, but the victim was also a good friend of Hays’ family and spent time with them outside of church. All of the abuse took place in Hays’ home in Chicago’s Austin community, down the block from where the victim lived, authorities said.

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Priest: I abused 10 boys but not the complainant

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Liam Heylin

The priest on trial for a sex assault on a teenage boy in the sick bay of a boarding school in 1979 told the jury he had admitted sexually assaulting 10 other boys, but that he did not touch the complainant.

Prosecution barrister Pearse Sreenan asked the former dean of discipline at the school in Carraig na bhFear, Co Cork, Tadhg O’Dalaigh, 70, of Woodview, Mount Merrion Avenue, Blackrock, Dublin, how he could remember all of the boys given that there were so many.

“Did you keep a diary?” Mr Sreenan asked.

“No I did not keep a diary,” O’Dalaigh replied. “I would prefer to plead guilty [if it had happened] and move on, get the thing over and done with, but I did not, I did not touch him… I don’t know if he was abused or not, but I certainly did not abuse him.”

Mr Sreenan said, by O’Dalaigh’s own admission, he abused 10 boys, the last in 1984, and by 1995 he was able to identify every one of them. The barrister asked how he could remember.

“You would feel very, very guilty about it,” the accused said. “You would be conscious of being kind to them. It would not be the event and finished with it, it would be making efforts not to antagonise them in any way so they won’t make any complaint.”

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.

Alleged sex assault in school sick bay

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Liam Heylin

A boarding school student in 1979 described in court yesterday how he was indecently assaulted in the sick bay by a priest who was also dean of discipline.

This was the allegation made against the accused man, Tadhg O’Dalaigh, aged 70, of Woodview, Mount Merrion Avenue, Blackrock, Dublin, who denied yesterday he indecently assaulted the boy on a date in March or April 1979.

The charge stated that, on that occasion, the defendant masturbated the student until he ejaculated at the sick bay of Colaiste An Chroí Naofa, Carraig na bhFear, Co Cork. O’Dalaigh pleaded not guilty. He was put on trial yesterday before Judge Donagh McDonagh and a jury of 10 men and two women.

Defence senior counsel Tom Creed asked the complainant why he did not leave the school and go to another school if he was in such fear, trepidation, and stress after the alleged indecent assault.

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Vatican’s shroud of secrecy on sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

By AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS
PUBLISHED: 27 June 2014

A senior Australian Catholic lawyer has outlined how the Vatican has used a culture of silence to prevent the world discovering the sordid details of its investigations into pedophile priests.

Canon law expert Sister Moya Hanlen, chancellor of Wollongong diocese in NSW, took to the witness stand at Sydney’s royal commission into child sex abuse on Friday.

The inquiry is looking specifically at the conduct of John Gerard Nestor who was defrocked in 2008 after becoming mired in sex abuse allegations.

Sister Hanlen revealed how in 2001, when the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) took the lead in managing abuse investigations, rules were put in place preventing their details and those of punishments being published for at least 10 years.

“Does that mean effectively that the church throughout the world is not learning, as it happens, about decisions that are being made?” chair of the royal commission Justice Peter McClellan asked Sister Hanlen.

“It does seem to be that way,” she replied, adding that she expected some of the investigations from 2001 to start being made public soon.

Sister Hanlen also outlined how so-called ‘pontifical secrets’ – part of an omerta or silent culture among the church’s most senior identities – had been used to hush-up key details of abuse investigations.

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Footnote to Footnote to Footnote…

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

Footnote to Footnote to Footnote: The Story of the Home for Unwed Mothers in Tuam, Ireland Again — More on Baptismal Status of Children Buried There

William D. Lindsey

A footnote to a footnote to a footnote: some days back, I noted that in the initial thread here discussing the story of the unmarked graves of children and babies at a home for unwed mothers in Tuam, Co. Galway, Ireland, readers had suggested that the children buried in unmarked graves had been denied baptism. As I also noted in that posting several days ago, I responded to this claim by noting that I hadn’t ever heard of a practice of denying baptism to illegitimate children, and I doubted that this claim was true.

But then I noted that I had come across several articles that appeared to be reporting that some of the children buried at this home for unwed mothers had, indeed, been denied baptism due to the circumstances of their birth. I cited those articles, so that readers might be able to compare the conflicting claims re: the Tuam story being made in this or that article.

I subsequently added another footnote noting that Salon author Mary Elizabeth Williams was deploring what she called the “pathetic scramble” to spin the Tuam story in a way that denied the ill-treatment dished out to both mothers and children in these homes in Ireland over the course of many years.

And now I want to direct readers’ attention to another article that specifically focuses on the claim that children were denied baptism at the Tuam home, and which seeks to refute that claim: this is Kevin Clarke’s recent “Galway Horror” article at America. I encourage readers of the previous threads to read this latest addition to the discussion of the baptismal status of the children buried in the unmarked graves behind the Tuam facility.

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Suburban Pastor Accused of Molesting Boy

ILLINOIS
CSNChicago

A pastor is accused of molesting a boy from his congregation over a period of several years.

The Rev. John Hays, 57, of the First Presbyterian Church of River Forest is charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse.

According to the Chicago Tribune, the alleged abuse involved an 8-year-old boy from the church and continued for six years. The alleged victim is now 19.

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.

Italy: Opus Dei Beast PR Stunt of the Day: Mafia members excommunication’s purpose is to diffuse attention away from bestial JP2 Army & Nazis Nuns

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

June 24, 2014

Paris Arrow

The Opus Dei Beast PR Stunt of the Day is the Italian Mafia members excommunication which is a Hollywood strategy copycat attempt to divert Catholics’ attention away from the truth especially on 6 issues that won’t go away, see below.

Our initial reaction was, here goes another “Argo and John Paul II make believe legends” again except this time it is Pope Francis in the starring role of the greatest Pretender and Impostor of Jesus – taking on the Italian Mafia like in an action packed movie concocted by Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team. Read our article, Argo &“saint” John Paul II are make-believe legends of Hollywood and the Vatican, the twin cities that “lie for a living” http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2013/07/argo-john-paul-ii-are-make-believe_11.html

You don’t need to be a rocket scientist to see that the underling purpose of this Mafia Pope Francis connection of course is to divert the world’s attention away from the bestial JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army that can’t seem to go away even after the canonization of John Paul II. And now another Catholic scandal has erupted in Ireland on the bestial priests’ female counterparts – the Irish Catholic nuns akin to Nazis that has recently caught the world by storm. Opus Dei Beast’s puppet the (AP) Associated Press tries to paint a more “sober” image of the nuns and try to put a lid on the story, but it’s too late, the genie has escaped the bottle. Then the Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team tries to wipe out the Catholic scandals by saying that everybody is doing it anyway.

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Abuse and corruption the Australian way

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

John Warhurst | 29 June 2014

Rotten apples with the caption ‘Australian owned and grown’We should open our eyes and take in what multiple government inquiries are telling us about Australian society at the moment. It is not enough to focus on just one; we should consider the revelations cumulatively. It is little exaggeration to say that almost no major institution in our society, public or private, has been left untouched. We should join the dots and cry.

There are many inquiries underway. The four most significant are being conducted by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, the Royal Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption, the New South Wales Independent Commission against Corruption, and the Defence Abuse Response Taskforce. Each of them is broad and the preliminary findings and the content of public hearings, on top of what we already know from previous investigations and trials, point towards damning conclusions.

A significant focus of the Child Sexual Abuse commission has been dioceses and orders of the Catholic Church. But hearings have also focused on the terrible shortcomings of government-run institutions, other churches and secular non-government organisations, including the Salvation Army, the Scouts and the YMCA. The police and the legal profession have also been implicated.

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Pope Francis to meet British victims of clergy sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Nick Squires, Rome

Pope Francis will for the first time meet victims of clerical sex abuse, including British victims, at the Vatican next week.

Sources confirmed to The Telegraph that the encounter, which will also include Irish, Polish and American victims, will take place at his private residence, Casa Santa Martha, a Vatican guesthouse in the shadow of St Peter’s Basilica.

It will be the first such meeting of Francis’s pontificate, after he was elected in March last year as the successor to Benedict XVI, who also met groups of victims.

It will be a private meeting and the Vatican is keen to keep the exact date and time under wraps.

Such encounters could help the process of healing for people left traumatised by their childhood experiences, one former victim of sex abuse said.

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On Religion: Clergy, temptation, minors and the law

UNITED STATES
Star Democrat

Surely one of our world’s most endangered species — up there with the mountain gorilla or the Sumatran tiger — is the church “ministerius youthii.”

That was the conviction of the late Louis McBurney, a Mayo Clinic-trained psychiatrist who spent decades at his Colorado retreat center helping ministers crushed by the demands and temptations of their jobs. Youth ministers, for example, face stunning parental expectations, low pay, the loss of privacy and a nagging sense of powerlessness.

Plus, it’s hard to work with adolescents in a sex-soaked culture. Many older teens think they are more mature than they really are, noted McBurney in his 1986 volume, “Counseling Christian Workers.” Consider the case of “Joe,” a newly married seminary graduate who was energetic, talented and driven. Then, there was this one girl.

“She was a beautiful 17-year-old who was more mature than her peers,” wrote the psychiatrist. “They began to play tennis together, and she was frequently the last to leave group activities. Joe couldn’t remember who made the first move to sexual intimacy, but once that happened, it snowballed.”

Many were hurt in the train wreck that followed — an all-too-common scenario that, in the past, often played out behind closed doors with parents and church leaders hiding the damage. Times have changed, to some degree, after years of public debate about the sexual abuse of minors by clergy, teachers, coaches and other trusted adults.

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Kentucky Church Hires Registered Sex Offender …

KENTUCKY
Christian Post

Kentucky Church Hires Registered Sex Offender as Pastor; Man Now Faces Charges of Alleged Rape, Sodomy of 14-Y-O Boy at Church

BY MORGAN LEE , CHRISTIAN POST REPORTER
June 24, 2014

A Kentucky church that hired a pastor with full knowledge that he’s a registered sex offender, is now the scene of an another alleged crime in which the minister is accused of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy who attended the church.

Roy Neal Yoakem, who leads the New Gospel Outreach Church in Scottsville, Kentucky, allegedly raped a 14-year-old boy at the church and police believe that another incident occurred in a nearby town, reported WSMV.

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Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown selling bishop’s home

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

Updated: Thursday, June 26 2014

By: Marc Stempka

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. — The leader of the Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown will be moving from his residence, with the diocese selling the bishop’s home to help pay, in part, for claims made regarding sexual misconduct cases, according to a diocesan spokesperson.

Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown spokesman Tony DeGol said in a release Thursday Bishop Mark Bartchak will move from his home in Frankstown Township, outside of Hollidaysburg, to the rectory at the Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament in downtown Altoona.

DeGol said the Diocesan Finance Council and the College of Consultors approved the sale of the home, with proceeds from the sale being used for diocesan pastoral needs, which includes care for victims in sexual misconduct cases.

“Bishop Bartchak’s decision to sell the residence and move to the cathedral rectory has been under consideration for some time,” the release said. “In all of his previous assignments, the bishop has resided with other priests, and he is looking forward to that arrangement once again.”

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Wollongong bishop Peter Ingham speaks at royal commission on sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By KATE McILWAIN June 27, 2014

Wollongong Bishop Peter Ingham has told a public inquiry of his repeated attempts to stop an accused child molester from working as a priest while the Vatican stalled.

In the witness box at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Bishop Ingham said he was frustrated and disappointed at the length of time it took the church to stand down former priest John Nestor.

Mr Nestor was suspended from the ministry in 1997 after he was convicted, but later acquitted on appeal, over aggravated indecent assault charges of a 15-year-old altar boy.

When more complaints emerged about his behaviour towards boys at summer holiday camps, the diocese continued to pursue his dismissal.

Bishop Ingham began his tenure in Wollongong in 2001, amid an appeal to the church’s highest judicial authority, the Apostolic Signatura. This was launched by the Wollongong diocese after another church body – the powerful Congregation for the Clergy – had ruled Mr Nestor should be allowed to work as a priest despite the child abuse allegations.

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Nigeria: Enugu Pastor Impregnates 20 Female Members

NIGERIA
allAfrica

Daily Trust

BY TONY ADIBE, 26 JUNE 2014

Enugu — The arrest and subsequent prosecution of one pastor Timothy Ngwu for alleged sexual harassment, and indiscriminate impregnating of both married and single women in his church, has again raised the issue of clerics whose stock in trade is to sleep with female members of their church.

Timothy Ngwu, said to be a self-acclaimed Pastor, who also doubles as the Leader and General Overseer of Vineyard Ministry of the Holy Trinity, Ihe-Owerre, Nsukka Loocal Government Area of Enugu State is currently remanded in Enugu prison for impregnating over 20 female members of his church.

The bubble burst when Mrs. Veronica Ngwu, wife of the pastor, could no longer bear the randy life style of her husband, and blew the whistle for his arrest by the police.

At the time of filing in this report, Pastor Ngwu has put over 20 female members of his church in the family way, insisting that he was obeying God’s injunctions.

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Former St. Henry’s pastor, music director Harry Walsh …

MINNESOTA
Monticello Times

Former St. Henry’s pastor, music director Harry Walsh answers questions about allegations, tries to clear reputation

By Tim Hennagir
June 26, 2014

When Harry Walsh heard a knock at his door last Dec. 17, two Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) reporters standing in bone-chilling temperatures greeted him.

The former St. Henry’s Catholic Church pastor and music director said he wasn’t about to let two unknown souls freeze to death, so he invited them inside his home.

“They were out on the doorstep, and they identified themselves as being from MPR, and they asked me if I was Harry Walsh,” he said.

“They were standing out in the sub-zero cold, and I said, ‘Come in out of the cold.’ I didn’t have the heart to leave them standing there,” Walsh said. “They came uninvited and unannounced.”

Two days later, MPR broke a lengthy investigative story online entitled, “Abuse claims kept secret allowed priest to minister and teach sex ed.”

Walsh said one of the reporters asked him about sexual abuse allegations involving a person in Detroit. The reporter asked Walsh if the allegations were true, and questions about his position on celibacy involving priests in the Catholic Church and his employment with Wright County Human Services, which ended a week later during a scheduled board meeting.

“I’m trying to adjust to the fact that I’m not needed in the community, county, church and school,” Walsh said in an interview with the Monticello Times.

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Canberra priest defends Catholic sexual abuse investigations

AUSTRALIA
The Age

June 25, 2014

Tom McIlroy
Legislative Assembly reporter at The Canberra Times

A Canberra priest has defended his role in investigating allegations of child sexual abuse inside the Catholic Church, amid criticism of his decision not to keep records.

Last week, former NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell accused Father Brian Lucas, the secretary of the Australian National Catholic Bishops Conference, and another priest of being responsible for “criminal inaction”.

Mr O’Farrell called for the leaders of the church in Australia to remove Father Lucas.

The Canberra-based priest, who is also a trained lawyer, has answered questions in two inquiries about his involvement in handling of abuse claims dating back to the late 1980s.

This month Father Lucas told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse sitting in Canberra he kept no notes of a 1993 meeting with serial paedophile Brother Kostka Chute.

Giving evidence to the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry in the Hunter region, Father Lucas said he conducted as many as 35 interviews with accused priests, and sought to convince them to resign from public ministry or work with children.

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Editorial: Savile horrors remind us of need for vigilance

UNITED KINGDOM
Irish Independent

Posing for photographs with corpses. Making jewellery out of glass eyes taken from dead bodies and sexually abusing vulnerable patients aged five to 75. Such revelations about the late British DJ Jimmy Savile, shockingly exposed as a prolific abuser never called to account for his crimes, are beyond comprehension.

Yesterday a report into 28 UK hospitals, including Leeds General Infirmary and Broadmoor Psychiatric Hospital, unveiled a sickening catalogue of sexual abuse by a single individual not seen in Britain or Ireland since the controversy over the late paedophile priest Brendan Smyth.

Just as Ireland was convulsed by the prevalence of abuse by clerics – and the subsequent handling of complaints by the Catholic hierarchy when that crisis emerged – our neighbours across the water are experiencing their own historic child protection nightmare whose reach has extended beyond Savile.

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Royal Commission: Disgraced priest threatened to sue following papal dismissal

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

June 27, 2014

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

When a Catholic priest was formally dismissed by the Pope in the wake of sexual misconduct claims, he made a “veiled threat” to sue the Bishop who delivered the news.

Wollongong Bishop Peter Ingham told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that John Nestor refused to accept that he was to be dismissed by papal decree after a lengthy battle to oust him from the ministry which went all the way to the Vatican.

Bishop Ingham told Mr Nestor he was not going to make the Pope’s decision in 2008 widely known.

“I told him the situation and I said I’d be letting the clergy know but I wasn’t planning to make it public,” he told the commission.

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June 26, 2014

Irish abuse survivors to meet Pope Francis next week

IRELAND/VATICAN CITY
Irish Times

Paddy Agnew, Patsy McGarry

Thu, Jun 26, 2014

Sources in Rome have confirmed that Pope Francis will meet clerical sex abuse victims, including Irish victims, in the Vatican sometime next week. On the papal flight back to Rome following his recent pilgrimage to the Holy Land, Francis told reporters that he would be meeting a group of victims, probably sometime in early July.

Vatican practice where such meetings are concerned usually entails no advance warning, with news of the encounter relayed to the media only after the victims have met the pontiff. In theory, this is to avoid any form of media concentration on what for many victims is a difficult and tortured “spiritual” moment.

However, given that Francis himself released the news on the papal flight, the only blanks to be filled in concern the names and origins of the victims. Vatican sources suggest they will come from Ireland, the US, Britain and Poland.

It is expected that the meeting will take place in the Domus Santa Marta, the Vatican bed and breakfast that Pope Francis uses as his residence in preference to the Apostolic Palace.

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Bishop of Durham calls for inquiry into Savile abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
The Northern Echo

THE Bishop of Durham has called for a public inquiry into abuse as peers expressed anger and disgust over the scale of Jimmy Savile’s sexual abuse in hospitals across the country.

The Right Reverend Paul Butler said cases like Savile and Rochdale highlighted that “we have a long history of abuse within institutions” including schools, care homes and churches.

“If we don’t face up to the past failures we will never really improve the future,” he told the Lords.

“Powerful people have engaged in serious abuse and worked with each other to create opportunities and share their vices and victims.”

He said an independent inquiry should examine institutionally based abuse going back up to the past 50 years.

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INTL- Lessons & omissions from papal victim choices

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, June 26, 2014

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

A Catholic newspaper says that next weekend, the pope will reportedly meet with clergy sex abuse victims from four countries: the U.S., Britain, Poland and Ireland.

[The Irish Catholic]

In each of those four countries, hundreds or even thousands of victims are bravely speaking up and protecting children by exposing clerics who commit and conceal heinous clergy sex crimes.

There’s a lesson here for victims across the world: despite deep pain and long odds, by overcoming your fears and uniting with other victims, you can attract attention and sometimes prod Catholic officials to do something. More importantly, by stepping forward, you can reduce your shame, get some help and begin – no matter what the church hierarchy does or doesn’t do – to really protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded.

Apparently, the pope is not meeting with any victims from the developing world, which is sad, because the plight of clergy sex abuse victims there is even more desperate than the plight of victims in developed nations. It would be encouraging if Francis would include Argentinean victims in this meeting, especially Julieta Añazco (who was abused by Fr. Ricardo Gimenez who is still a priest in Buenos Aires), Sebastian Cuattromo (who was abused by Fr. Fernando Enrique Picchiochi) and Beatriz Varela (whose son was abused by Fr. Ruben Pardo).

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Services get together to help victims

AUSTRALIA
Daily LIberal

By STEPHANIE KONATAR June 27, 2014

A NEW counselling support service, Sexual Assault Counselling Australia, was launched yesterday in Dubbo by Gemini Bakos, Duty Officer, Orana Local Area Command.

Rape and Domestic Violence Services Australia (RDVSA), formerly NSW Rape and Crisis Centre, established the service to assist those impacted by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The purpose of yesterday’s seminar was to raise awareness of the services Rape and Domestic Violence Services Australia provide among people within the industry.

“The impact of sexual assault is trauma, which can reek all sorts of havoc on a person and it can be difficult to assess and treat,” Karen Willis, Executive Officer of RDVSA, said.

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Judges: Pastor can testify in child sex trial

MICHIGAN
Record-Eagle

BY MATT TROUTMAN
mtroutman@record-eagle.com

TRAVERSE CITY — An Honor man’s admission to a pastor about a sexual assault on a young boy at church can be used as evidence in a criminal trial, state appellate judges ruled.

Steven William Richard, 29, faces accusations he molested a boy, then 6, in the bathroom of Immanuel Baptist Church in Grand Traverse County’s Garfield Township during a January 2013 church service. He’d been scheduled to stand trial last year in 13th Circuit Court on a sex crime charge, but an appeal put that on hold.

Michigan Court of Appeals judges this week ruled Richard’s statements to a church pastor after the incident don’t fall under the state’s clergy-penitent privilege. Grand Traverse County Prosecutor Bob Cooney said that puts the case back into 13th Circuit Court Judge Philip Rodgers’ courtroom for trial.

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Vatican blocked bishops’ actions against abusive priests before 2000, Australian bishop says

AUSTRALIA
Follow 1 in 3’s Blog

An Australian bishop has testified that until 2000, the Vatican’s Congregation for Clergy discouraged bishops from taking action against priests accused of sexual abuse.

Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide told a government commission that when bishops sought to discipline abusive priests, “the Congregation for the Clergy consistently made things difficult for them in trying to do that.” He said that the Vatican dicastery regularly supported accused priests who wanted to remain in active ministry.

Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, who was prefect of the Congregation for Clergy from 1996 to 2006, acknowledged in a 2010 interview that he encouraged bishops to protect priests from prosecution for sexual abuse.

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Documents Detail DJ’s Sex Act with Child

MICHIGAN
Fox 17

by Paul Cicchini
Reporter

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (June 25, 2014) – District Court documents from Calhoun County are revealing the details of a sexual encounter a former radio host is accused of having with a child.

According to the bench warrant for John Balyo, the former WCSG host took an 11-year-old boy to a hotel in Battle Creek where the child performed oral sex on Balyo.

Ofc. Eric Andrews told the court the victim was also fondled during the encounter.

The document also shows Balyo confessed to the sex act during an interview with police, after he was advised of his Miranda rights.

Balyo is being held without bail on two counts of criminal sexual conduct, one charge in the first-degree and one in the second-degree.

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Court docs reveal new information in former DJ’s sex crime case

MICHIGAN
Newschannel 3

[with video]

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – Newschannel 3 has uncovered new information in the case of a former Christian radio host charged with having sexual contact with a child.

John Balyo, a former on-air personality at Christian radio station WCSG was charged with two counts of felony criminal sexual conduct on Monday.

Police say his victim is a 12-year-old boy.

Federal officials confirmed that Balyo had been renting a storage unit in Plainfield with some disturbing things in it.

When searching the unit, police found kids clothing, duct tape, handcuffs, and chains.

They also found children’s obituaries, and body parts from a mannequin.

Wednesday, Newschannel 3 obtained court documents that give more detail on what Balyo is accused of doing.

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Feds: Balyo’s storage locker had “bondage” kit

MICHIGAN
WOOD

[with video]

PLAINFIELD TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WOOD) — Target 8 investigators have learned that a Christian radio host charged with raping an 11-year-old boy had a rented storage unit full of disturbing items.

According to federal agents, John Balyo, 35, told investigators about the storage unit when he was interviewed on June 20. He gave the agents consent to search the unit, which is located at West River Storage Suites on Samrick Avenue NE in Plainfield Township.

Among the items in the unit was a suitcase that held children’s socks and costumes, duct tape, four pairs of handcuffs, zip ties, rubber gloves, chains and a padlock, authorities said.

In addition, investigators found file folders full of magazine and newspaper articles about missing children, as well as copies of children’s obituaries, authorities said.

A federal source told Target 8 that agents found a bag containing various dismembered body parts from a medical mannequin in the storage unit.

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Ex-Christian radio host who ‘admitted raping an 11-year-old boy’ …

MICHIGAN
Daily Mail (UK)

By LOUISE BOYLE

Ex-Christian radio host who ‘admitted raping an 11-year-old boy’ had duct tape, handcuffs and chains in his storage unit

A former Christian radio host, who admitted to raping an 11-year-old boy, had a rented storage unit where he kept a ‘bondage kit’ of handcuffs, chains and duct tape, the FBI confirmed to MailOnline today.

John Balyo, 35, has been charged with first-degree criminal sexual conduct after he confessed last week to having sex with a child.

It is claimed that Balyo, from Battle Creek, Michigan, paid a man to arrange a sex session with a minor for him.

He was arrested last Friday while at the Big Ticket Christian music festival in Gaylord, Michigan. He was a morning show host on Christian station WCSG.

The handcuffs and other items were found in a suitcase after police searched a storage unit in Plainfield Township last Friday.

An Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) spokesman told MailOnline on Thursday that while being interviewed, Balyo indicated that he had a storage unit and gave officers permission to search the space.

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Feds: WCSG radio host had handcuffs, duct tape and chains in ‘bondage’ kit found in storage unit

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Tunison | jtunison@mlive.com
on June 25, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI — Federal authorities are confirming that a storage unit rented to former WCSG radio host John Balyo had a “bondage” kit that contained items including handcuffs, chains and duct tape.

Balyo is charged with first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving an 11-year-old boy. Police allege he paid a Battle Creek man to arrange for him to have sex with minors.

The “bondage” type items were discovered in a suitcase after a Friday, June 20, search of a Plainfield Township storage unit. Investigators also found a padlock, rubber gloves and children’s socks, authorities said.

A Homeland Security Investigations source said Balyo gave police consent to search the unit after he was arrested at a Christian music festival in Gaylord.

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Balyo update: Federal investigation turns up bondage items in storage unit

MICHIGAN
Gaylord Herald-Times

GAYLORD — A former downstate Christian radio station host who was arrested on criminal sexual conduct charges June 20 at the Big Ticket Festival in Gaylord has been denied bond.

John Balyo, 35, of Caledonia, was arraigned in Calhoun County’s 10th District Court Monday on one count each of first degree criminal sexual conduct and second degree criminal sexual conduct.

The charges are punishable by up to life in prison and up to 15 years in prison, respectively.

Federal investigators confirmed that on June 20, items which could be used for bondage, including handcuffs, duct tape, rope, zip ties and socks, were found in a Plainfield Township storage unit, rented out by Balyo. Plainfield Township is located approximately 10 miles north of Grand Rapids.

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John Balyo: Fund drive underway for Christian radio host’s wife after his child-sex arrest

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Agar | jagar@mlive.com
on June 26, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – After the arrest of Christian radio host John Baylo on child-sex allegations, supporters of his wife, Bethany, and her son are raising funds on her behalf.

Organizers set a $50,000 goal for the online fund drive.

“I hope many small donations turn into a river of blessing for you,” a donor wrote. “May God’s love show through these tokens of support for you and your son.”

The website said: “On June 20, 2014, Bethany and her son’s world was turned upside down by unforeseen circumstances. A new bride of just seven weeks, this now single mom is now experiencing something that no person should have to endure. Bethany has always been the first one to reach out and help others, now it’s our turn to help her and her son.”

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Pope Francis will meet Irish survivors of clerical abuse in the Vatican next week

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Jun 26, 2014 By Pat Flanagan

It will be the first time since his election that the Pontiff has met with victims to hear of their experiences

Pope Francis will meet Irish survivors of clerical abuse in the Vatican next week, it emerged today.

It will be the first time since his election that the Pontiff has met with victims to hear of their experiences.

It will also be the first time a Pope has met Irish survivors.

Pope Francis has promised to continue a “zero tolerance” approach to abuse.

The Irish Catholic newspaper reported several survivors will travel from Ireland for the meeting, expected to take place at the Vatican guest house where the Pontiff has made his home.

It is understood they’ll be accompanied by clerical abuse victims from other parts of the world, including Britain, the US and Poland. One abuse survivor, Amnesty International Ireland chief Colm O’Gorman, said last night that the Pope must not merely listen, but respond.

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Vatican says believers are shunning Catholic lifestyle after scandals

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

Lizzy Davies in Rome
The Guardian, Thursday 26 June 2014

The Vatican has blamed a pernicious mixture of insensitive priests, “conspicuously lavish” clerical lifestyles, the sex abuse scandal and a morally-lax modern culture dominated by the mass media for large numbers of Catholics no longer living their private lives according to church teachings.

In a document seen as the working paper for a hotly-anticipated meeting later this year, the Vatican said responses to a questionnaire it sent out globally last year showed that many ordinary believers were either ignorant of teachings on topics such as marriage and divorce or regarded them as overly intrusive.

The document found that insufficiently clear explanations, bad homilies and ill-prepared priests sometimes appeared to be to blame for the gulf between theory and practice. But it added: “On the other hand, many respondents confirmed that, even when the Church’s teachings about marriage and the family is known, many Christians have difficulty accepting it in its entirety.”

Pope Francis announced last year that the theme of October’s extraordinary session of the bishops’ synod would be devoted to the family, and the challenges the church faces when trying to connect with its flock on issues such as abortion, gay rights and artificial contraception.

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Nuns seek new mediation of sex abuse claims

MONTANA
Greenwich Time

By MATT VOLZ, Associated Press
Updated 12:02 pm, Thursday, June 26, 2014

HELENA, Mont. (AP) — Attorneys for an order of nuns plan to ask a judge Thursday for a new round of negotiations to settle claims of child sex abuse by priests and nuns in Montana, a request that comes less than three weeks before the first trial.

The first three plaintiffs who say they were abused as children in western Montana are scheduled to go to trial July 14. Additional trials with similarly small groups of plaintiffs are planned but not yet scheduled against the Ursuline Sisters of the Western Province.

The order of nuns and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Helena are defendants in two lawsuits filed in 2011 on behalf of 362 plaintiffs who say they were sexually abused in schools, churches and orphanages across western Montana between the 1940s and the 1970s.

The diocese filed for bankruptcy reorganization in federal court earlier this year as part of a $15 million proposed settlement with the plaintiffs. The Ursulines are not participating in the settlement.

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Accused Catholic priest said mass while Vatican dithered

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JUNE 27, 2014

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

A CATHOLIC priest barred from working publicly over allegations of child abuse continued to say mass and celebrate weddings in Australia and overseas while the Vatican spent years ­debating what action to take against him, the royal commission has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is investigating the church’s handling of John Gerard Nestor, who was defrocked in 2008, nearly 20 years after the church became aware of complaints against him.

Despite being suspended while the Vatican decided his fate, Mr Nestor wrote to his Australian bishop in about 2003, saying he was working at a US university where “50 people have returned to the sacraments as a result”.

“I have even recently cele­brated marriages of university students … with no objection from the bishop,” Mr Nestor wrote in a separate letter sent to the bishop of Wollongong in 2004.

Mr Nestor was barred from working publicly as a priest in 1997, following his conviction and subsequent acquittal on appeal for indecent assault, while the church investigated other abuse allegations against him.

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Q&A: A Conversation With Sue Lauber-Fleming & Patrick Fleming

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Magazine

By Jeannette Cooperman June 20, 2014

They set up a counseling practice together, fell in love, married. Both had treated victims of sexual abuse. Then Patrick Fleming, a former priest himself, began treating priests who’d been perpetrators, and he asked his wife, Sue Lauber-Fleming, to help him run a therapy group at the residential facility just outside St. Louis where these men now live. Sue shook the day that she told them her own story, of being abused by her pastor, a monsignor, when she was 4 years old. But since then, the Flemings have met hundreds of times, in groups and individually, with dozens of priests convicted of sexual abuse. In one of their books, Broken Trust, they note that in the media, “each priest appears as a sad news photo of a man in black and in trouble.” There’s no clue as to why they did what they did or whether they realize the damage. After counseling these priests for 12 years, the Flemings have some insight.

PF: We have worked with victims of all kinds of abuse, and we know how horrible the acts are and what damaging effects they have. So none of what I’m going to say about perpetrators is to excuse what they have done. But what we have seen is that this is clearly a sickness. These men have been scorned, vilified, raked through the coals, and really judged to be evil in some way. But pretty often, they have been sexually abused themselves—[about two-thirds] of the time—and nearly all of them experienced some other kind of trauma when they were growing up. As they start to recover, they start—in most cases, not all—to have deep remorse about what they have done and deep shame. Their level of pain is often as intense as, or greater than, their victims’. SL: As intense. I would not say greater.

How long can their denial last? SL: One priest, in group, kept saying, “But I didn’t abuse them. I just was loving them.” He’d spent time in prison already. This went on and on. PF: We challenged him regularly. We can tell these stories really directly: “This is what your victim experienced. This is the pain; this is the emotional damage; this is the sexual damage; this is the spiritual damage. Does that sound like love to you?” SL: Three years later, it finally clicked: “Oh! I was needing love, and I used them to fulfill my need for love.”

It took three years? SL: Yeah. And insurance says see somebody for six months.

So what worked? PF: I think it was the honesty of other people in the group, and gradually working his denial down—by this time, Sue had shared her own story. Rarely, actually, is it time and distance.

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Abuse allegations a ‘charade’: church man

AUSTRALIA
7 News

KARLIS SALNA
June 26, 2014

The former canonical advocate for a priest accused of molesting boys once called a church investigation into the alleged abuse a “witch hunt” and a “charade”, but now says he was later shocked by the evidence.

Father John Nestor was charged and convicted of indecently assaulting a 15-year-old altar boy in Wollongong in 1996 but was later acquitted on appeal.

Further allegations later surfaced, prompting attempts to have Father Nestor removed from the ministry and setting in train a church investigation under canon law.

The Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse, at a hearing in Sydney on Thursday, heard that even before the criminal charges and church investigation, other members of Wollongong’s Catholic Diocese had become aware of Father Nestor’s activities.

Father Mark O’Keefe told the commission that, when he was an assistant priest at Nowra in November 1988, he had become aware of Father Nestor running summer camps for boys.

He heard that boys on one of the camps, which included lessons on “manliness”, had to run naked from a bus to a water hole and back, and that there were group shower sessions.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: priest didn’t report rumours of ‘boys running naked’ at camps despite his concerns

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Brad Ryan

A priest who heard rumours of “boys running naked” at camps run by another priest says he refused to help promote the so-called “summer safaris”, but did not report his concerns to authorities.

Father Mark O’Keefe has been giving evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which is examining the case of former Wollongong priest John Nestor.

Mr Nestor was defrocked in 2008 after an investigation commissioned by the local diocese found he engaged in sexual misconduct at the camps between 1989 and 1993.

Father O’Keefe, now a parish priest in Wollongong, told the commission he became aware of the camps while working as an assistant priest in Nowra in 1988.

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Priest, 88, faces court on 1970s child-abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites Australia researcher (article posted 26 June 2014)

A priest of the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese, Father James Henry Scannell, aged 88, is currently undergoing a jury trial on charges that he sexually assaulted a 12-year-old altar boy more than 40 years ago. The alleged victim (now in his fifties) finally contacted the police after learning that his aunt’s funeral in 2010 was to be conducted by this priest, the court was told.

In the early 1970s, according to court documents, Father Scannell was stationed at St Anne’s parish in East Kew, Melbourne, where the 12-year-old served as an altar boy and attended with his aunt.

Father Scannell (date of birth 17 April 1926) is accused of sexually assaulting the boy at the priest’s parish house between August 1970 and July 1972 when the boy was aged between 11 and 13. Father Scannell has pleaded not guilty to one charge of buggery.

Father Scannell is alleged to have led the boy into his bedroom and then sexually assaulted him one day when the boy was at the priest’s house working for pocket money.

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Pope Francis will meet with Irish abuse survivors for the first time

IRELAND
Journal

POPE FRANCIS IS to meet with Irish survivors of clerical abuse next weekend.

It will be the first time since his election that the Pontiff has met with those who have been abused to hear of their experiences.

It will also be the first time that Irish survivors of abuse have met with a Pope.

The Irish Catholic reports that a number of Irish survivors will travel to the Vatican for the meeting which is expected to take place at the Vatican guesthouse – where the Pope lives.

They will be accompanied by survivors of clerical abuse from other parts of the world including Britain, the United States and Poland.

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BBC star Jimmy Savile ‘committed sex acts on dead bodies’ while volunteering at hospital

UNITED KINGDOM
ABC News (Australia)

Jimmy Savile, the late BBC TV presenter revealed two years ago to have been one of Britain’s most prolific sex offenders, might have sexually abused dead bodies in a hospital where he worked as a volunteer, say health investigators.

In 2012, police said Savile, one of the Britain’s best-known celebrities in the 1970s and 1980s, had sexually abused hundreds of victims, mainly young people, at hospitals and at BBC premises over six decades until his death aged 84 in 2011.

A series of reports covering 28 hospitals where he had worked showed Savile had used his fame and charitable work to get unsupervised access to patients, raping and sexually abusing boys, girls, men and women aged between five and 75 in wards, corridors and offices. …

Savile was knighted by Queen Elizabeth and honoured by the Pope for his voluntary work at hospitals, which he exploited to gain unprecedented access to patients.

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Unanderra priest’s support for Nestor queried

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By KATE McILWAIN June 26, 2014

Unanderra priest Father Mark O’Keefe was questioned about his support for an accused child molester – in defiance of his bishop’s orders – at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Thursday.

Wollongong priest John Gerard Nestor was convicted of aggravated sexual assault towards a teenage boy in 1996 but was later acquitted.

After other complaints about Mr Nestor’s behaviour at summer altar boy camps and a long campaign by the Wollongong Catholic Diocese, he was defrocked by decree of the Pope in 2008.

In 1998, however, Fr O’Keefe allowed Mr Nestor to conduct Mass at his Unanderra church despite instructions from then Wollongong Bishop Philip Wilson that he not do so, the commission heard.

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Vatican to appoint adviser for Legionaries of Christ

VATICAN CITY
Headlines from the Catholic World

Vatican City, Jun 26, 2014 / 03:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- In a statement released by Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J., the Vatican spokesman revealed that the Holy See is to appoint an adviser to assist the Legionaries in the revision of their newly-drafted constitutions.

Having received numerous questions from journalists regarding the state of the Legionaries in light of the set revisions, Fr. Lombardi published the answers he received from spoken with Cardinal Joao Braz de Aviz and Archbishop Jose Rodriguez Carballo, who are currently overseeing the process.

Cardinal Braz de Aviz serves as prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, and Archbishop Carballo as the congregation’s secretary.

In the statement published June 25, Archbishop Carballo explained that the identity of the Vatican-appointed adviser has not yet been released, but that as “a gesture of fraternal closeness” he and Cardinal Braz de Aviz will meet with the Legionaries general director, Fr. Robles Gil, July 3 to discuss the needed changes to their constitutions and to reveal who the adviser will be.

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Pope Francis to meet Irish abuse survivors in Vatican

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

by Michael Kelly
June 26, 2014

EXCLUSIVE

Irish survivors of clerical abuse will travel to Rome next week for a key meeting with Pope Francis The Irish Catholic has learned.

It will be the first time since his election that the Pontiff has met with those who have been abused by priests and religious to hear of their experiences. Francis has promised to continue a ‘zero tolerance’ approach to abuse.

The Irish Catholic understands that a number of Irish survivors will travel for the encounter which is expected to take place next weekend at the Vatican guesthouse where the Pope has made his home.

It is understood that they will be accompanied by survivors of clerical abuse from other parts of the world including Britain, the United States and Poland.

The encounter with the Pope, which Vatican sources say will afford survivors the opportunity to recount their suffering first-hand to Francis, will be private. Survivors will then be able to decide whether or not they want to speak to the media about the papal meeting with many expected to remain anonymous.

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Report: Pope to meet abuse victims at Vatican next week

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jun. 26, 2014 NCR Today

Pope Francis is to meet with survivors of clergy sexual abuse for the first time as pontiff next week, according to a report Thursday by the independent Irish newspaper The Irish Catholic.

Survivors of abuse, the newspaper reports, will be meeting Francis at the Vatican guesthouse where the pontiff lives. Among those met by Francis will reportedly be survivors from Ireland, Britain, the U.S., and Poland.

The encounter would follow remarks made by Francis during a press conference after the pontiff’s trip to the Holy Land in May, when he said he would be hosting such a meeting. Timing of the event would also place it during the same week as the July 1-4 meeting of the Council of Cardinals, the eight-cardinal group that is advising the pontiff on reforming the governance of the church.

Among members of that group is Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who is serving on a new papal commission on clergy sexual abuse and had been asked by Francis to set up a meeting with survivors.

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Royal commission into child sexual abuse sparks rise in sex assault claims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MICHAEL WALSH THE AUSTRALIAN JUNE 26, 2014

SEXUAL assault reports hit a four-year high last year, with victim support groups attributing the rise to awareness created by the royal commission into child sexual abuse.

Data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics today reveals almost 20,000 sexual assaults were reported to police in 2013, an increase of 8 per cent on the previous year.

While all states and territories recorded an increase, the largest change was seen in Tasmania where the number of reports rose by 48 per cent. This was followed by New South Wales with an 11 per cent increase.

NSW Rape Crisis Centre executive officer Karen Willis said it was encouraging that more victims were coming forward.

“This is great news, because what we know is that only 17 per cent of people who experience sexual assault report it to police. We know it’s really difficult for victims to come forward,” she said.

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Vic priest accused of 1970s abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

An alleged victim was compelled to come forward after 40 years of silence by the prospect of his aunt’s funeral being conducted by the priest he says sexually abused him as a boy.

James Henry Scannell, 88, is accused of luring an altar boy to the bedroom of his Melbourne home in the early 1970s and sexually assaulting him.

When Scannell agreed to conduct the funeral of the boy’s aunt in 2010, the alleged victim told his family to find another priest, prosecutor Kristie Churchill said.

The former altar boy, now aged in his 50s, approached police just months later, Ms Churchill told Scannell’s Victorian County Court trial.

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Abuse allegations a ‘charade’: church man

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

The former canonical advocate for a priest accused of molesting boys once wrote to the accused and told him he had “suffered enough”.

The former canonical advocate for a priest accused of molesting boys once called a church investigation into the alleged abuse a “witch hunt” and a “charade”, but now says he was later shocked by the evidence.

Father John Nestor was charged and convicted of indecently assaulting a 15-year-old altar boy in Wollongong in 1996 but was later acquitted on appeal.

Further allegations later surfaced, prompting attempts to have Father Nestor removed from the ministry and setting in train a church investigation under canon law.

The Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse, at a hearing in Sydney on Thursday, heard that even before the criminal charges and church investigation, other members of Wollongong’s Catholic Diocese had become aware of Father Nestor’s activities.

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8 POWERS the VATICAN uses to CONTROL CATHOLICS and COUNTRIES: TRADITIONAL, CHARISMATIC, COERCIVE, SOCIAL, LEGAL, REMUNERATIVE, EXPERT, ECOLOGICAL

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

There are Eight kinds of power the Vatican exercises to control Catholics, other people and countries. They are traditional, charismatic, coercive, social, legal, remunerative, expert and ecological powers. All Americans must decipher which of these power(s) control them – so they can set America free from the Vatican Mammon Beast a.k.a. Opus Dei Beast and all their deceptions and tentacles on the American dollar — for America is the main donor of the Vatican. Two other articles affirm this. “Why America needs to confront the Vatican”

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In his ministry, Pope Francis’ achievements are substantial, not merely empty symbolism

UNITED STATES
Intermountain Catholic

Friday, Jun. 27, 2014

By Msgr. M. Francis Mannion
Pastor emeritus of St. Vincent de Paul Parish

More than one commentator has suggested recently that Pope Francis is all symbolism and little substance. I disagree. (For one thing, I think symbolism is substance.)

Here are six areas in which Pope Francis has made real differences that are unlikely to be overturned by a future pope.

1. The end of the imperial papacy. “Conservative” theologians never tire of saying that the Church is not a democracy. That’s true. But neither is it a monarchy, never mind an empire. It is, as Cardinal Avery Dulles said, “a community of disciples.”

Pope Francis is no imperial figure. He does not live in the Apostolic Palace, but in a guesthouse. He has avoided much of the traditional papal regalia. He dislikes the idea of a papal court, with its myriad of ceremonial attendants. He travels in a modest car, even on occasion on a bus (with cardinals).

2. More effective communication. Traditionally, popes have spoken with extreme caution and avoided spontaneous comments. Now, Francis gives daily homilies off the cuff. He speaks freely to crowds – and never over their heads. His engaging and open style of communication has mesmerized the media, and it is often said of Pope Francis that “The world is listening.”

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Archbishop hopes settlement brings victims closure, chance to heal

WASHINGTON
National Catholic Reporter

Catholic News Service | Jun. 25, 2014

SEATTLE
Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain said Tuesday that he hopes the settlement of 30 claims of sexual abuse will bring victims “closure and allow them to continue the process of healing.”

The Seattle archdiocese settled cases involving abuse that the victims said was carried out by members of the Christian Brothers at two institutions managed by the order in western Washington.

The most recent cases in question were nearly 30 years old and some dated back almost 60 years, according to an archdiocesan press release announcing the settlement, which totaled $12.1 million.

A teaching order, the Christian Brothers operated the Briscoe School, a boarding and day school for boys in the Kent Valley, beginning in 1914. The order also staffed and managed Bishop O’Dea High School, an archdiocesan school, from its opening in 1923.

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Vatican document for synod on family balances mercy and cultural blame

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jun. 26, 2014
Synod on the Family

Struggles faced by faithful around the world in following Catholic teachings stem mainly from ineffective education in those teachings and the pervasive effect of a relativistic culture, states the guiding document for an upcoming Synod of Bishops on the family.

The document, anticipated by many Catholics as a barometer for what to expect from the synod, also strongly reinforces church teachings regarding the indissolubility of marriage, the restriction of marriage to heterosexual couples, and that partners must be open to having children.

At the same time, the document states, the church must respond with mercy to the struggles of families to adhere to sometimes controversial teachings — like those prohibiting divorce and remarriage, contraception, cohabitation, and same-sex marriage — and “support her children on the path of reconciliation.”

Released by the Vatican on Thursday, the document was prepared for an extraordinary Synod of Bishops to be held in October. Called by Pope Francis last year, the 2014 synod is the first of two back-to-back yearly meetings of the world’s Catholic bishops at the Vatican on the theme of “pastoral challenges of the family in the context of evangelization.”

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Child abuse …

NEW YORK
The Riversale Press

Child abuse victims stung by Albany inaction

By Shant Shahrigian
Posted 6/25/14

Horace Mann School graduate Joseph Cumming says it took him 34 years to fully realize his treatment at the hands of his music teacher Johannes Somary was sexual abuse. But by then, even if he had wanted to, it was far too late for him to take legal action. New York’s criminal and civil statute of limitations for sexual abuse of minors is five years after the victim turns 18.

After revelations of decades of abuse involving more than 30 victims at Horace Mann emerged in June 2012, the Bronx District Attorney’s office said the limitations prevented it from prosecuting any of the perpetrators.

The state legislature’s recent failure to take up the Child Victims Act — which would eliminate the criminal and civil statues of limitations for child sexual abuse and create a one-year window for past victims to seek justice — infuriated Mr. Cumming and other survivors.

They placed the blame on state Sen. Co-Majority Leader Jeff Klein, the leader of the breakaway Independent Democratic Conference (IDC), who decides which bills come to the floor of the senate in consultation with Republican Co-Majority Leader Dean Skelos.

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Patrick to sign minimum wage, child sex abuse statute bills

MASSACHUSETTS
MassLive

By State House News Service
on June 25, 2014

BOSTON — Gov. Deval Patrick on Thursday will sign bills raising the minimum wage to $11 per hour by 2017 and extending the statute of limitations in civil child sex abuse cases.

The minimum wage bill (S 2195), which Patrick will sign at 11 a.m. in the Statehouse’s Nurses Hall, increases the wage from $8 per hour in three annual steps and gives Massachusetts the highest minimum wage in the country.

The bill also includes unemployment insurance reforms and increases wages for tipped workers to $3.75 from $2.63.

At 2 p.m., Patrick is scheduled to sign in Room 157 a bill extending the statute of limitations in civil child sex abuse cases (H 4126).

The bill extends the statute to 35 years after a victim turns 18, up from three years, meaning individuals can file lawsuits until they turn 53 years old. The bill also allows individuals who discover late in life they’ve suffered emotional and psychological harm to file a claim seven years after the discovery, up from the current three years.

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Sleeping with boys was ‘common practice’: royal commission on sex abuse in Wollongong, day 3

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

June 26, 2014

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

A disgraced clergyman claimed it was ”common practice” for priests to sleep with boys when he was under investigation by Catholic Church assessors as part of the Towards Healing process.

The Royal Commission on Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard that defrocked Wollongong priest John Nestor denied that sharing a bed with teenage boys was inappropriate.

Mr Nestor was convicted of sexually molesting a 15-year-old altar boy in 1996 but later acquitted on appeal. He is not expected to appear at the hearing, which is examining how the Catholic Church deals with cases in which convictions have not been made against priests accused of wrongdoing.
In a 1998 letter read out to the royal commission on Wednesday, Mr Nestor told Catholic Church investigators he had done nothing wrong by sharing a bed with the boys.

”I deny inappropriate behaviour, in the circumstances,” he wrote.

”This allegation must be considered in the context of common practice of other priests at the time.”

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Synod document cites cultural and economic threats to family

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Francis X. Rocca
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The working document for the October 2014 extraordinary Synod of Bishops offers a picture of the Catholic Church today struggling to preach the Gospel and transmit moral teachings amid a “widespread cultural, social and spiritual crisis” of the family.

The 75-page “instrumentum laboris,” published by the Vatican June 26, is supposed to “provide an initial reference point” for discussion at the synod, whose theme will be the “pastoral challenges of the family in the context of evangelization.”

The document is based principally on comments solicited in a questionnaire last November from national bishops’ conferences around the world. But it also reflects comments sent directly to the Vatican by individuals and groups responding to the questionnaire, which was widely published on the Internet.

Topics in the working document include some of the most contested and controversial areas of Catholic moral teaching on the family, including contraception, divorce and remarriage, same-sex marriage, premarital sex and in vitro fertilization.

Bishops’ conferences responding to the questionnaire attributed an increasing disregard of such teachings to a variety influences, including “hedonistic culture; relativism; materialism; individualism; (and) the growing secularism.”

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Former pastor pleads guilty in child sex abuse case

VIRGINIA
Northern Virginia Daily

By Joe Beck

LURAY — A former pastor in Luray and Shenandoah County has pleaded guilty to six counts in a child molestation case in Page County Circuit Court.

The plea agreement of James Richard Daley, 71, a pastor at the Lebanon Lutheran Church in Lebanon Church for several years in the 1980s, did not specify any sentencing recommendations but Daley could spend the rest of his life in prison. Page County Commonwealth’s Attorney Kenneth Alger II said the five felony counts of indecent liberties with a child and one felony count of aggravated sexual battery to a child less than 13 years old carry a prison term of up to 45 years.

Daley’s sentencing hearing is scheduled for Aug. 25.

Alger said in an interview Wednesday that he consulted with the victims and their families about the plea agreement, and all of them supported it.

Daley was initially charged with 12 counts of aggravated sexual battery to a child less than 13. Alger said the investigation involved several victims but the grand jury indictments pertained to only one.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: Adviser to allegedly abusive priest admits evidence is ‘shocking’

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY BRAD RYAN
June 26, 2014

A Catholic priest who criticised an investigation into allegedly abusive priest John Nestor says he did not know about the evidence in the case and it “shocked” him when he later saw it.

Canon law expert and priest of 50 years, Rev Dr Kevin Matthews, says he now believes his criticisms were “over the top” and Mr Nestor “violated many boundaries”.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the case involving Mr Nestor, a former Wollongong priest who was the subject of numerous complaints about his conduct towards young boys.

After Mr Nestor was convicted of abusing an altar boy in 1996, local bishop Philip Wilson tried to remove Mr Nestor from the ministry, even though the conviction was overturned a year later.

The commission has heard Bishop Wilson’s efforts to defrock Mr Nestor were resisted by the Vatican for years, until Mr Nestor was dismissed by Pope Benedict in 2008.

Rev Matthews acted as Mr Nestor’s ‘canonical advocate’ – an adviser in canon law and “companion on the journey”.

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St. John’s abbot reacts to abuse response criticism

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

David Unze, dunze@stcloudtimes.com

COLLEGEVILLE – St. John’s Abbey Abbot John Klassen this week defended his response to clergy sex abuse allegations, issuing a statement that says the abbey strives for transparency and the truth, even when allegations against a monk are unfounded.

A 1,051-word statement from Klassen this week to the St. John’s Prep School community included his “personal reflections” on whether the abbey’s responses to abuse allegations have “fallen short of what is expected.”

Klassen cited a letter he said he recently received that asked where the “public voice” of St. John’s is when abuse allegations are made.

“I know we are bound to disappoint some of our friends who believe we respond too timidly and others who see our responses as incomplete and even disingenuous,” Klassen wrote.

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Wollongong bishop threatened to take Nestor case to Pope: commission

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By KATE McILWAIN June 25, 2014

A former Wollongong bishop felt so strongly that a priest accused of child molestation should not be allowed to practise he was willing to “take the matter all the way to the Pope” and resign if necessary, the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard on Wednesday.

Philip Wilson, now the Archbishop of Adelaide, also criticised the Congregation for the Clergy (CFC) – one of the Vatican’s most powerful bodies – for always taking the side of priests accused of abuse.

Archbishop Wilson was being questioned about events in 1997 on day two of the hearing into the Wollongong Catholic Diocese’s response to child sexual abuse complaints against then Father John Nestor.

At that time, Mr Nestor had successfully appealed a conviction of aggravated indecent assault against a 15-year-old altar boy.

However, due to other complaints – including that Mr Nestor had watched boys showering, made boys bathe naked, conducted bodily “soap inspections” and touched a boy “on the penis and the bum” – Archbishop Wilson was seeking to bar him from working in the ministry until further assessments had been done.

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Wollongong bishop would resign as matter of conscience over accused priest

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

MARK COLVIN: The Catholic bishop of Wollongong Peter Ingham has appeared before the child abuse royal commission and expressed his frustration with the Vatican at the spent years trying to stop a priest from working in the community, especially with children.

Bishop Ingham said despite Father John Nestor’s eventual acquittal on charges of indecent assault, his past behaviour represented an unacceptable risk and he should not be allowed to work in public ministry.

He also echoed the views of his predecessor who said he would have to resign if John Nestor was allowed to continue to work as a priest.

Emily Bourke has the story.

EMILY BOURKE: The royal commission is continuing to shine a light on internal processes of the Catholic Church, and in particular it’s forced the door open on how the Church investigates and establishes the facts around child sexual abuse allegations brought against priests or religious.

Today, a leading canon lawyer, Kevin Matthews, revealed some serious shortcomings.

Under questioning by Justice Peter McClellan and counsel assisting Angus Stewart, Dr Matthews admitted that cases against priests are frequently tossed out because they can’t be proved through the canon law process.

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June 25, 2014

Irish government finalizes terms of inquiry into mother-baby homes

IRELAND
Catholic News Service

By Michael Kelly
Catholic News Service

DUBLIN (CNS) — The Irish government is finalizing the parameters of a judicial inquiry into church-run state-funded mother and baby homes.

The inquiry comes amid increased disquiet about some of the reporting of the original story of St. Mary’s Home in Tuam, run by the Bon Secours congregation of nuns.

In May, local historian Catherine Corless revealed her research, which found that between 1925 and 1961, 976 infants died in the home for unmarried mothers and their children. She had found no evidence that they were buried in local cemeteries and instead believed that the children may have been buried in a common grave on the site.

However, several media outlets began reporting that the children had been “dumped” in a disused septic tank on the site. Within days, the international media was gripped by the story — much of which turned out to be factually inaccurate.

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AIF signs agreement with Argentina to fight money laundering

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) The Financial Intelligence Unit (AIF) of the Holy See and Vatican City State signed a bilateral cooperation agreement with Argentina on Tuesday, in an effort to expand the international network “to fight money laundering and the financing of terrorism”.

Read the official statement below:

L’Autorità Informazione Finanziaria (AIF), the Financial Intelligence Unit of the Holy See and Vatican City State, has formalized its bilateral cooperation with Argentina, signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) at the Vatican on Tuesday.

The MOU was signed in the Palazzo San Carlo by the Director of AIF, Rene Bruelhart, and the President of the Unidad de Información Financiera (UIF) of Argentina, José Sbattella.

“We’re very pleased to have signed this MOU with Argentina today,” Bruelhart said. “This is an important step to further expand the network to support global efforts to fight money laundering and the financing of terrorism. We’re looking forward to fruitful cooperation with Argentina, which will be beneficial to both parties.”

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Cómo perdió la inocencia Juan Carlos Cruz a manos de Karadima

CHILE
La Tercera

Llegué tarde a la lectura de “El fin de la inocencia” del periodista y ex seminarista Juan Carlos Cruz, luego de haber abordado muy tempranamente las dos contundentes investigaciones periodísticas que existen sobre el siniestro caso del cura Karadima: “Los secretos del imperio Karadima”, del equipo de Ciper Chile, liderado por Mónica González, y “Karadima, el señor de los infiernos”, de María Olivia Monckeberg, que se publicaron el año pasado. (Leer reseñas: http://noticias.terra.cl/ximena-torres-cautivo/blog/tag/los-secretos-del-imperio-de-karadima/ y http://noticias.terra.cl/ximena-torres-cautivo/blog/2011/04/28/karadima-el-senor-de-los-infiernos-habla-su-autora/)

Por estos días, la gente que lee y compra libros le ha dado la preferencia al testimonio en primera persona de Juan Carlos Cruz, donde relata de una manera transparente y casi ingenua la tragedia de su vida: el abuso sexual y sicológico que padeció en la otrora tan respetable Parroquia El Bosque, donde tenía su imperio Fernando Karadima.

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Priests voice support for bishop selection reform, married priests

ST. LOUIS (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas C. Fox | Jun. 25, 2014 NCR Today

SAINT LOUIS, MO — Since its inaugural gathering in June 2012, a meeting that drew some 240 priests to St. Leo University northeast of Tampa, Fla, the Association of U.S. Priests, which claims more than 1.000 members, has said it wants to give priests a voice.

Using a numbering system to indicate degrees of support, the association passed eight resolutions dealing with priest support of the new Roman Missal translation, for the late Cardinal Bernardin’s Common Ground initiative, immigration support, married clergy, workers’ pensions, input into the selection of bishops, broadening the association’s membership base and fostering greater dialogue with the bishops.

This is how they fared: With 3 being the highest scored and representing “very strong favor” and -3 being the lowest and representing “very strong disfavor,”

* a resolution to form a task force to keep track up difficulties priests are experiencing with the new translations received a 2.8.
* a resolution calling for more transparency and involvement in the selection of bishops also received a 2.8.
* a resolution calling for the establishment of an immigration working group in support of comprehensive immigration reform received a 2.72
* a resolution calling upon the U.S. bishops to support a married priesthood received a 2.5 score
* a resolution calling for support for worker’s pensions received a 2.1
* and a resolution calling for support of inter-church dialogued based on Cardinal Bernardin’s “Common Ground” initiative received 2.0.

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Giran orden de aprehensión contra cura pederasta de SLP

MEXICO
La Tarde

* La Procuraduría señaló que en caso de ser necesario recurrirán a la Interpol para la ubicación y detención del cura Eduardo Córdova

La Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado de San Luis Potosí (PGJE) dio a conocer que se obtuvo por parte de un juez, la orden de aprehensión contra el sacerdote Eduardo Córdova Bautista, acusado de pederastia.

La Procuraduría señaló que en caso de ser necesario recurrirán a la Interpol para la ubicación y detención de Eduardo Córdova, acusado de abuso sexual de menores cuando se desempañaba como sacerdote de la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí.

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MÉXICO: Giran orden de aprehensión contra cura pederasta

MEXICO
Entorno Inteligente

Vanguardia / Un Juzgado Penal otorgó a la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado (PGJE) una orden de aprehensión en contra del sacerdote Eduardo Córdova Bautista, acusado de los delitos de abuso sexual calificado, corrupción de menores y privación ilegal de la libertad en agravio de 19 menores.

El procurador estatal, Miguel Ángel García Covarrubias, informó que solicitará el apoyo a todas las Procuraduría de Justicia del país para la localización y captura del religioso.

Dijo que de ser necesario recurrirá a la Interpol mediante la emisión de la “ficha roja”, para su búsqueda internacional.

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Mexico judge orders priest’s arrest in abuse case

MEXICO
Quincy Herald-Whig

MEXICO CITY (AP) – Mexican authorities say a judge has ordered the arrest of a now-suspended priest accused of sexually abusing minors in the northern state of San Luis Potosi.

The state attorney general’s office said Wednesday that Eduardo Cordova is considered a fugitive.

Earlier this month, 19 people filed a criminal complaint alleging that they were sexually abused by Cordova and that his archdiocese covered up the allegations for years.

The complaint was filed in San Luis Potosi, where Cordova had recently served as the archdiocese’s legal representative.

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Statement on Franciscan Friars, Legionaries

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) In a statement released on Wednesday, the Director of the Holy See Press Office spoke about the situation of two religious orders, the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate, and the Legionaries of Christ, based on information received from the Secretary of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life.

The statement said that Father Fidenzio Volpi, who has been appointed as Commissioner to supervise the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate, along with all the seminarians of the Order, were received by Pope Francis in an audience at Casa Santa Marta on June 10. The audience was described as “a gesture that demonstrates the interest with which Pope Francis is following the situation of the Franciscans of the Immaculate, and his closeness to the work that the Commissioner is undertaking in the name of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life.” The statement said the Holy Father was being kept informed of all that was being taken in regard to the situation. Currently, a residence is being sought in Rome where the student brothers of the Institute who are attending Pontifical Universities in Rome can live in order to continue their studies.

Wednesday’s statement also addressed the situation of the Legionaries of Christ. Following the celebration of a General Chapter, the Legionaries have returned to the competence of the Congregation for Consecrated life. The Legion had been under an Apostolic Delegate, whose work concluded with the General Chapter. As a “gesture of fraternal closeness,” the statement said, the Prefect and the Secretary of the Congregation will visit the headquarters of the Legionaries on 3 July to discuss personally the corrections that should be made to the Constitutions presented to Dicastery, and to announce the name of the Pontifical Assistant.

The statement noted that the corrections to the Constitutions are very few.

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St. Paul archdiocese vicar ordered to answer more questions

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Richard Chin
rchin@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 06/25/2014

A former top official in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis will have to undergo further questioning in a sexual abuse lawsuit against the church, according to a decision Wednesday by a Ramsey County judge.

The Rev. Kevin McDonough, former vicar general for the archdiocese, had been required to give depositions in a lawsuit about the church’s handling of child-abusing priests.

District Judge John Van de North ruled in a hearing on the lawsuit of a plaintiff known at Doe 1. Doe 1 is suing the archdiocese, alleging former priest Thomas Adamson molested him in 1976 or 1977 when Adamson served at St. Thomas Aquinas in St. Paul Park.

Van de North also said Twin Cities Archbishop John Nienstedt won’t be questioned again by attorneys suing the church.

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MN- Twin Cities Catholic official will be deposed again, SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, June 25, 2014

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

We’re glad a high ranking Twin Cities Catholic official will be deposed again and hope his archbishop will also insist that he be questioned by police too.

[Star Tribune]

Fr. Kevin McDonough very likely knows more about clergy sex crimes and cover ups than any church employee in Minnesota. For years he was the “go to guy” in pedophile priest cases in the Twin Cities area. We believe that dozens of kids were assaulted because Fr. McDonough misled parishioners and protected predators. And we believe that Fr. McDonough should be defrocked.

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Vatican denies Boston parishioners’ final appeal to keep churches open

MASSACHUSETTS
Catholic Review

June 24, 2014

By Dennis Sadowski
Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON – Parishioners who have occupied a closed Massachusetts Catholic church for nearly a decade said they plan one final petition to Pope Francis to prevent the building from being sold by the Boston Archdiocese.

Jon Rogers, a member of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Parish in Scituate, said petitioning the pope was a last resort measure. Despite the step, he said he was not sure it would succeed.

“We promised 10 years ago when we started this we would exhaust every avenue of appeal,” Rogers told Catholic News Service June 24.

St. Frances Xavier Cabrini parishioners have kept an around-the-clock presence in the church since October 2004 in the hope that various appeals based on canon law would be successful. The parish was one of 70 that closed beginning in 2004 in a downsizing plan carried out under Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley.

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Psychology, Ecclesiology and Yoder’s Violence

UNITED STATES
Mennonite Life

Peter Dula
ISSUE 2014, VOL. 68

In 1970, Geoffrey Hartman, a young professor of literature, brought his friend Paul de Man to join him in the English department at Yale. In the ensuing years, the two of them became close colleagues in the American reception of Jacques Derrida for whom, in 1975, they arranged a recurring visiting appointment. The three became close friends and together changed the way American professors and students thought about literature. But they couldn’t have come from more different backgrounds. At the age of nine, Hartman had been in Kindertransport, the program that evacuated Jewish children from Germany to England in 1939. He didn’t see his mother again for 6 years. Derrida had to leave his school in Algiers when the quota for Jewish students was reduced and Algerian Jews lost their citizenship. De Man, it turns out, was a crassly opportunistic Nazi collaborator who wrote a series of anti-Semitic articles in the Belgian press in the ‘40s1. What does it mean that these three, with such different histories, could agree on so much about literature and philosophy?

Reading the reviews of Evelyn Barish’s new book on de Man2, I couldn’t help but think of John Howard Yoder. As de Man’s students and colleagues have struggled to come to grips with his Nazi past, so Mennonite theologians and others are now, finally, trying to learn how to think about Yoder’s violence against women. We all owe Barb Graber and Ruth Krall a great deal for refusing to let us (by which I mean myself and other Mennonite theologians who write about and teach Yoder) continue to ignore the facts of Yoder’s violence. Graber asked us to do something specific: Welcome, encourage and make efforts to include analysis of the astoundingly ironic disconnect between Yoder’s orthodoxy and his severe lack of orthopraxy.3 In what follows, thanks to Mennonite Life, I take up that invitation. I begin with de Man’s case not to imply that such a task is impossible, but to acknowledge how complex it can be. All ideas are products of a social location. But, as the de Man story shows, how they are so, is an incredibly complex question. There is no straight line of determination between life and work; there are countless crooked and tangled threads. In what follows I try to identify and follow one thread in Yoder.

While I am a theologian, deeply indebted to the work of Yoder, my teaching responsibilities tend to be for EMU’s Religious Studies curriculum. So aside from an essay in our introductory Christian ethics course and an essay in an anthropology of religion course, I have only taught Yoder at length in one class, a topics seminar on political theology in the Fall of 2011. That seminar spent one class period (out of four on Yoder) talking about Yoder’s sexual violence and if and how we should relate that to his work.

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AN UPDATE FROM THE DISCERNMENT GROUP ON SEXUAL ABUSE

UNITED STATES
Menno Snapshots

Published: June 19th, 2014, Posted by: Annette Brill Bergstresser

The Discernment Group, convened by Mennonite Church USA to address issues related to sexual abuse, has been working hard on multiple fronts.

The group met on June 3 in Elkhart, Ind. Carolyn Holderread Heggen, who serves as an advisor to the group, was able to join us for the entire meeting. We also conferred with Rachel Waltner Goossen, the historian who is researching Mennonite institutional responses to reports of John Howard Yoder’s sexual violations in the 1970s, ’80s, and ’90s.

Here are several emerging initiatives the group has been tending to:

1. Documenting the scope of Yoder’s abuse and the church’s response to it. An issue of Mennonite Quarterly Review focusing on sexual abuse in Mennonite contexts is planned for early 2015. It will include an article by Goossen on Mennonite church institutional responses to Yoder’s sexual abuse of women. In the meantime, we want to report several findings as we have revisited the legacy of Yoder’s sexual violations. We are discovering from previously unexamined institutional and personal files, which include memos by Yoder himself, additional evidence of sexual violation perpetrated by Yoder on many women, including students, missionaries, church workers and others. We are also learning how long it took church leaders to intervene effectively. There are documented reports of sexual violation by Yoder, including fondling and sexual intercourse. In some instances, women who engaged in sexual encounters were persuaded, at least initially, by Yoder that such behavior was permissible between Christian “brothers” and “sisters.” Many others resisted his unwanted advances, and were perplexed and distressed by his pursuit.

While a four-year church accountability process for Yoder began in 1992, doubt lingers about its outcome since very little about this process was communicated to the general public. In 1996, when the process concluded, recommendations were made for “the continuing use of an accountability plan” and that “the church use his [Yoder’s] gifts of writing and teaching.” Additionally, very little has been communicated about the prolonged and devastating impact that Yoder’s sexual abuse has had on many women. There is much for the church to lament about the harm inflicted on these individuals, as well as the grief experienced by family members of all involved, and by colleagues and administrators who tried to call Yoder to account.

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AP’s “MASS GRAVE” RETRACTIONS

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on the second retraction by the Associated Press (AP) over Ireland’s “mass grave” story:

AP issued its first retraction on June 20 regarding its stories of June 3 and June 8 on Ireland’s “mass grave” story. On June 23, AP reporter Shawn Pogatchnik issued a second, more complete, retraction; his article was titled, “Media Exaggerated Horror Tale at Irish Orphanage.” Here is an excerpt of what he said:

“The reports of unmarked graves shouldn’t have come as a surprise to the Irish public, who for decades have known that some of the 10 defunct ‘mother and baby homes,’ which chiefly housed the children of unwed mothers, held grave sites with forgotten dead. The religious orders’ use of unmarked graves reflected the crippling poverty of the time, the infancy of most of the victims, and the lack of plots in cemeteries corresponding to the children’s fractured families.”

“Contrary to the allegation of widespread starvation highlighted in some reports, only 18 children were recorded as suffering from severe malnutrition. While publicly available records are incomplete, sporadic inspection reports indicate that the orphanage’s population exceeded 250 throughout the worst years of child mortality, when overcrowding would have encouraged the spread of infection.”

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US priests association takes on Müller

UNITES STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Robert McClory | Jun. 24, 2014 NCR Today

The strong public scolding Cardinal Gerhard Müller delivered in April to the Leadership Conference of Women Religious really disturbed many Catholics. It was so obviously out of sync with Pope Francis’ call for dialogue, discernment and especially respect when discussing matters of faith.

Yet, Müller’s blunt, confrontational accusations stirred little immediate reaction. It was as if people were stunned into silence by the contrast between the pope’s approach and that of the head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF).

Some wondered if the pope and Müller might be playing a good-cop-bad-cop routine for reasons that were not clear. The LCWR leadership refused to respond to Müller’s specifics and said they somehow had a fruitful dialogue with the cardinal and affirmed their determination to stay at the table despite the cardinal’s opening rant. And several coalitions of reform groups urged the pope to apologize for an outburst so contrary to his own approach.

For more than a month then, there was mostly silence and a turn to other topics. I was not aware of any bishops or priests speaking out until a brisk retort to Müller was issued by the little known Association of U.S. Catholic Priests (AUSCP) at their meeting in Seattle on June 2. The association, formed three years ago, had been docile and relatively invisible until now. In a letter addressed to Francis, however, they expressed “sadness and dismay” at Müller’s “abuse of the process” with the sisters. Here are a few samples from their candid statement.

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Diocese of Winona Press Conference

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Winona

[summary page]

[with press packet]

Abuse Summary Release
Monday, June 23 at 11:00 a.m.
Cathedral of Sacred Heart, St. Thomas Room
360 Main St, Winona, MN (SE parking lot entrance)

WINONA, MN – June 23, 2014 – In an unprecedented effort for transparency and healing, today the Diocese of Winona voluntarily released an abuse summary of details and facts surrounding 13 priests who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse while serving in the Diocese of Winona decades ago. Nine of the thirteen priests on the list are deceased, two have been laicized, and two are pending laicization. No priests of the Diocese of Winona who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse are still in active ministry. The Diocese concern is for the rights of everyone involved and the abuse summary complies with legal restrictions about privacy of medical and mental health information and protects the victims and the innocent. There is full disclosure of the identity of abusers.

“We are committed first and foremost for the compassionate healing for the victims and their families. We remain steadfast to finding and telling the truth and are vigilantly committed to ensuring these unspeakable crimes against children never happen again,” said Most Reverend John M. Quinn, Bishop of the Diocese of Winona.

Nearly all of the sexual abuse committed in the information made public today happened in the 1970’s and early 1980’s. Many of the priests who had sexually abused children were sent for treatment and diagnosis when the accusations of abuse were made known to the Diocese. In many of the cases, priests were assessed, diagnosed and treated by medical professionals and were recommended they could return to active ministry.

“Today, we know much more about the diagnosis and treatment of pedophilia than we did twenty years ago. The compulsion to abuse is present in 4 percent of the general male population, about the same percentage you see in the priest population,” said Nelle Moriarty, Chair of the Diocesan Review Board and member to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) National Review Board. “The USCCB’s Charter for the Protection of Youth and Young Persons recognizes that second chances cannot be given when the safety of our children and young persons are at risk,” said Moriarty.

This knowledge and awareness has empowered the Church to take extensive measures to ensure that our children are safer than ever before. The Diocese of Winona is in full compliance with the Charter, adopted by the U.S. Bishops in 2002 and requires that no priest with even one substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor can serve in public ministry. The Diocese of Winona has a zero tolerance policy for child sexual abuse and has adopted a policy that goes above and beyond the legislature’s mandatory reporting requirement, by reporting all accusations of child sexual abuse to law enforcement, not just those within three years of the report, as required by statute.

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Diocese releases abuse details

MINNESOTA
Winona Post

By Chris Rogers

For the first time ever — as best as church officials could tell — an American diocese voluntarily released the details of reports of child sexual abuse by its priests and a Winona bishop publicly stated that he believes that the allegations are true.

Following a court order, the Diocese of Winona (DOW) released the names of 14 priests “credibly accused” of child sexual abuse last December. On Monday, the diocese released additional information about reports of abuse the diocese received over decades, including, in many cases, when the reports were made and what was done.

“We have learned that we need to be transparent and honest in order for people to understand that what we’re doing [now] is different and children are being protected,” said Bishop John Quinn, explaining the decision to release the summaries. DOW Director of Communications Joel Hennessy and public relations consultant Laurie Archbold noted the criticism of the diocese in recent news reports, and described the release as an opportunity for the diocese to be honest about the past and demonstrate how it has changed.

Most of the reported abuses took place during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. Nine of the alleged abusers are deceased, two have already been laicized, and another two are facing laicization. In most of the cases, reports of abuse were apparently not relayed to law enforcement officials. The Minnesota mandatory reporting law, which requires people who work with children to convey reports of child abuse to law enforcement agencies, was enacted in 1975.

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Italian priest charged …

ITALY
Washington Post

Italian priest charged with soliciting sexual favors from desperate refugees

BY JOSEPHINE MCKENNA | RELIGION NEWS SERVICE June 25

ROME — The Catholic Church in Italy is facing an embarrassing scandal after the arrest of a priest accused of demanding sexual favors from immigrants seeking political asylum in Sicily.

The Rev. Sergio Librizzi, who was also the director of the Catholic charity Caritas in the Sicilian city of Trapani, was arrested at his parish on Tuesday (June 24) as he was preparing for Mass.

Prosecutors charge that Librizzi sought sexual favors from newly arrived migrants fleeing the Middle East and Africa in exchange for help with residency visas, as well as from the poor who sought help from the charity.

The priest’s arrest is particularly embarrassing for the church given Pope Francis’ strong stand in support of the immigrants flooding the area. Soon after his election last year, Francis’ first pastoral visit outside Rome was to the island of Lampedusa, near Sicily, where he called for greater solidarity and an end to the “global indifference” over refugees.

There has been a surge in refugees fleeing conflict and poverty in Syria, Iraq and other countries. Last month, the Italian government said the number of refugees and other migrants reaching its shores had risen to more than 39,000 in the first half of 2014.

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Judge to rule later on whether archdiocese must turn over electronic data on abuse allegations

MINNESOTA
Daily Reporter

By AMY FORLITI Associated Press

ST. PAUL, Minnesota — Attorneys for victims of alleged sexual abuse by clergy are asking the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to turn over electronic files about accused priests so they can verify who had information about these priests, and when they had it.

In a hearing Wednesday, Ramsey County Judge John Van de North asked both sides to submit more information before he decides whether the archdiocese has to turn over emails, texts and other computer data.

The documents are being sought in a lawsuit that alleges church officials created a public nuisance by keeping the names of accused priests secret.

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Judge Wants More Info Before Ruling on Priests’ Electronic Data

MINNESOTA
KAAL

Attorneys for victims of alleged sexual abuse by clergy are asking the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis to turn over electronic files about accused priests so they can verify who had information about these priests, and when they had it.

In a hearing Wednesday, Ramsey County Judge John Van de North asked both sides to submit more information before he decides whether the archdiocese has to turn over the emails, texts and other computer data.

The documents are being sought in a lawsuit that alleges church officials created a public nuisance by keeping the names of accused priests secret.

The archdiocese says it has already provided the information, but the plaintiffs say it’s not in a format that allows them to see when the documents were created or modified.

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Judge orders ex-vicar general to answer more questions

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: June 25, 2014

Judge rules that the Rev. Kevin McDonough must testify again, but not Archbishop John Nienstedt.

A Ramsey County District judge Wednesday ordered that the former vicar general of the Twin Cities Archdiocese, the Rev. Kevin McDonough, submit to another round of questioning on the church’s handling of clergy sex abuse.

However, Judge John Van de North rejected a move to require Archbishop John Nienstedt to return for further questioning.

The order came during a hearing in which attorneys for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis asked the judge to halt further demands for information from attorney Jeff Anderson. Anderson’s St. Paul firm represents a man whose lawsuit prompted the first round of depositions this spring.

Tom Weiser, attorney for the archdiocese, said the church welcomes the opportunity for McDonough to return to testify, “while it wasn’t our first choice.”

Anderson said the ruling will allow him to continue to unearth information on how the archdiocese has handled abusive priests.

“We’re comforted to know that more information that needs to be revealed is going to be,” he said.

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MN- Catholic officials misinterpret 1st Amendment, SNAP says

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

For immediate release: Wednesday, June 25, 2014

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

It’s sad to see Catholic officials exploiting and misrepresenting the First Amendment. It protects belief, not actions.

[Star Tribune]

Minnesota church officials say they should get to continue keeping secrets about clergy sex crimes and cover ups because the First Amendment protects them. But we find it very hard to imagine that the Founding Fathers envisioned that provision would be used to shield powerful officials who repeatedly put kids in harms’ way.

This isn’t complicated. People can think anything they want. They can’t, however, do anything they want. That’s simple common sense. It’s the basis of civilized society.

We hope the judge will reject Minnesota Catholic officials’ argument that their callous actions and incriminating records about helping predators and endangering kids should be kept hidden.

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Man files suit against archdiocese

OREGON
Catholic Sentinel

The Archdiocese of Portland is being sued for $8.1 million by a man who claims to have been sexually abused by a deceased Portland priest.

The man claims that between 1969 and 1972 – when he was between the ages of six and nine – Archdiocese of Portland priest Father Maurice Grammond abused him between 10 and 20 times.

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Large crowds expected at London vigil to remember Tuam babies

UNITED KINGDOM
Irish Post

By Niall O Sullivan on June 25, 2014

OUTRAGED crowds are due to gather outside London’s Irish Embassy next week at a vigil for hundreds of babies who died in Ireland’s homes for unmarried mothers.

Organisers said they are expecting a large turnout as the city’s 180,000-strong Irish population gets its first chance to react to the discovery of 800 dead babies at a home in Tuam, Co. Galway.

“Our sense is that people here are very upset about the allegations that have emerged surrounding infant mortality rates in different homes,” said London-based Avril Egan, whose mother was in one of the institutions.

She added that people were particularly “disturbed” by allegations from former residents that nuns refused to give women painkillers during childbirth because they were “sinners”.

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