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.

August 19, 2014

Church commissioner: ‘independent’ from Melbourne archdiocese

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AUGUST 19, 2014

Pia Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

THE QC leading the Melbourne archdiocese’s response to victims of clergy sex abuse has rejected claims his title of “independent commissioner” conceals the church’s proximity to his role.

Peter O’Callaghan QC has today given evidence at the royal commission hearing examining the archdiocese’s Melbourne Response process.

Mr O’Callaghan, who has been independent commissioner since the Melbourne Response began in 1996, told the commission he “absolutely”

believes he is independent from the archdiocese, though he is funded by it and uses the same instructing solicitors.

“I believe I have been independent in all respects,” he said.

“So far as I’m concerned, I make the decisions without fear or favour and without any influence from other persons.”

Victims who wish to seek compensation from the archdiocese under the Melbourne Response, established by then Archbishop George Pell, are required to meet with Mr O’Callaghan so he can investigate whether their claims meet the balance of probabilities.

They are then referred to a panel which decides the appropriate level of compensation, capped at $75,000, and advises the archdiocese of any punitive action it should take against the offender.

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.

Barrister picked by George Pell to investigate sex abuse gives evidence

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Tuesday 19 August 2014

The barrister appointed by Cardinal George Pell in 1996 to investigate hundreds of child sexual abuse claims involving the Catholic church in Melbourne thought all claims would be investigated within six months, the royal commission has heard.

More than 18 years later, Peter O’Callaghan QC is still working on the investigation as victims continue to come forward.

His role in Melbourne Response – the operation set up by the church to investigate the claims – included interviewing victims in his legal chambers in the city and making recommendations to the church as to whether they should be compensated, the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse heard on Tuesday.

On Monday, two witnesses told the hearing at Victoria county court in Melbourne how they felt discouraged by O’Callaghan from reporting their abuse to the authorities. They also spoke of feeling overwhelmed by O’Callaghan’s chambers, where most interviews were, and still are, carried out.

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

Church lawyer told victims that police involvement would postpone process

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Tuesday 19 August 2014

The lawyer in charge of investigating child sex abuse claims on behalf of the Catholic archdiocese in Melbourne told victims that if they went to the police, his investigation process would end.

Peter O’Callaghan QC told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse on Tuesday that he believed once police became involved, he would be in contempt of court if he continued the church investigation.

The two-week hearing in Melbourne is scrutinising church’s scheme for handling abuse cases, known as the Melbourne Response, established by Cardinal George Pell in 1996.

A witness identified only as AFA told the commission on Monday that during his meeting with O’Callaghan, he was told he would be eligible for compensation from the church of up to $75,000, but this process would be postponed if he went to police.

O’Callaghan said this was standard procedure.

“…if the police are in charge of a matter then I take no further steps because to do so would be conducting a concurrent investigation with the police which would be inappropriate,” he told the Commission.

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

Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response commissioner …

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response commissioner expected complaints process to take six months

August 19, 2014

Jane Lee and Cameron Houston

The man who determined whether the Catholic Church should compensate Melbourne clergy abuse victims for almost 20 years thought it would only take six months to handle all their complaints.

Peter O’Callaghan, QC, was appointed the Independent Commissioner of the church’s Melbourne Response – its internal process for handling abuse victims’ complaints – for a six-month term in 1996.

Mr O’Callaghan, who appeared at the Royal Commission in Melbourne on Tuesday, said he told the church’s solicitors and Archbishop Hart that he was optimistic the investigations could be concluded in a short time-frame.

“I was all for expediency if I could achieve it,” he said.

After almost two decades and over 351 complaints, Mr O’Callaghan, QC, conceded his initial estimate was “utopian”.

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.

OPINION: Priests should quit parishes

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By BOB O’TOOLE Aug. 18, 2014

HUNTER Catholic priests Monsignor Allan Hart and Father William Burston should be removed from their positions as parish priests immediately, and asked to retire or resign from active ministry.

The Clergy Abused Network (CAN), which is a voluntary group of survivors of sexual abuse in a religious context, does not seek to completely end their ministry. They should be free to perform relief liturgical celebrations in the diocese as required.

But the findings of the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry in May this year make anything less than their removal as parish priests unacceptable.

The commission investigated, among other things, Catholic Church knowledge of child sex allegations involving the late Hunter priests Denis McAlinden and Jim Fletcher.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen, SC, found that Monsignor Hart was “an unsatisfactory and unimpressive witness”.

The behaviour of Monsignor Hart was an embarrassment to those present at the inquiry.

He contradicted himself. He attempted to distance himself from the issues by claiming he had passed information to his superiors and by doing so had abrogated himself from any further responsibility.

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.

Group criticizes diocese’s handling of accused priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 19, 2014

By Peter Smith / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A victims’ advocacy group is criticizing the Diocese of Pittsburgh for not alerting the public 11 years ago when it learned that a Boston priest had been accused of committing sexual abuse here in the early 1960s.

The Diocese of Pittsburgh is defending its actions, saying it had no direct information about the allegation when it learned of it in 2003.

The Rev. John P. Carroll, who is supervised by the Archdiocese of Boston, faces a church trial there that could lead to his removal from the priesthood over an allegation that he sexually abused an altar boy at St. Michael Church in Elizabeth in 1962 or 1963. Father Carroll, now 86, is currently restricted from ministry.

Bishop David Zubik sent letters over the weekend to be read at parishes where Father Carroll had served between 1962 and 1972, asking any potential victims to come forward, after the Boston archdiocese notified him this month of the trial. Father Carroll also served at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale and St. Denis in Versailles (now St. Patrick in McKeesport).

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

Abuse victim told to sue Catholic Church

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

BY ANGUS LIVINGSTON
August 19, 2014

The man in charge of investigating pedophile priests in Melbourne told one victim to sue the Catholic Church.

The priest had been moved to the victim’s parish after allegations of abuse elsewhere were reported to the church.

Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan QC told the child abuse royal commission he believed the man had a case for compensation through the courts.

“I said to him, `Look, I know that you should get independent legal advice because there may be an action open to you’,” Mr O’Callaghan told the commission on Tuesday.

“I thought he would have much more success, and I think he did.

“I don’t recall the details of it, but typically of course if you can mount a case at common law you will recover much more than the ex-gratia compensation.”

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

Child sex abuse royal commission: Melbourne Response investigator ‘encouraged’ victims to see police

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Helen Vines
Updated 19 Aug 2014

The head of the Catholic Church’s response to sexual abuse allegations encouraged victims to go to the police, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

Peter O’Callaghan, QC, has been the independent commissioner for the abuse complaint handling process, known as the Melbourne Response, since it was set up in 1996 by then Melbourne Archbishop George Pell.

Mr O’Callaghan has come in for criticism during the current proceedings, with two witnesses telling the commission he discouraged them from taking their claims to the police.

Giving evidence to the commission, Mr O’Callaghan said he encouraged victims to go to the police, and some followed his advice, while others did not.

He agreed with counsel assisting Gail Furness SC that if police were investigating a complaint, his own investigation stopped because “it would be a concurrent investigation and quite inappropriate”.

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

Catholic…

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Catholic priests encouraged victims of abuse to go the police, the church tells the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN AUGUST 19, 2014

VICTIMS of sexual abuse by Catholic priests were repeatedly encouraged to make formal complaints to police, but rarely did, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan QC told the commission today many victims didn’t want to name offenders to police.

Mr O’Callaghan told the hearing he didn’t pass matters to police because victims didn’t ask him to and he didn’t want to breach their confidentiality.

Just 119 of the 326 upheld complaints have been dealt with by police since the Melbourne Response, the church’s internal compensation panel, was started in 1996.

Mr O’Callaghan is being grilled as part of the commission’s examination of the Melbourne Response scheme.

It has been widely slammed by victims and was last year heavily criticised during Victoria’s parliamentary inquiry into abuse by religious and other organisations.

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.

August 18, 2014

4 new lawsuits allege sexual abuse at Archdiocese of Santa Fe

NEW MEXICO
KOB

By: Blair Miller, KOB.com

An Albuquerque law office filed four new lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe alleging priests raped several boys in the 1990s and before in the latest string of legal filings against the church.

The lawsuits come just three months after similar lawsuits were filed against the Archdiocese.

Four male victims, who range from age 31 to 58 now, allege they were abused as children by four different priests, including Fr. Perrault, Fr. Jason Sigler and Fr. Tony Gallegos in northeastern New Mexico.

The lawsuits say the victims have suffered from delayed Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) because of the abuse.

The lawsuits also say priests were hired by the Archdiocese directly out of the Servants of the Paraclete in Jemez Springs, where priests were sent from around the country for psychosexual disorder treatment.

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.

Trial date set for pastor accused of sexual abuse

NEW YORK
WIVB

[with video]

HARTLAND, N.Y. (WIVB) – A pastor from Orleans County accused of sexually abusing children will go to trial in January.

Rev. Roy Harriger is charged with three counts of coercive criminal sexual conduct against a child, one count of first degree incest, two counts of incest and three counts of endangering the welfare of a child. A judge set a trial date of January 20 when Harriger was in court Monday for pre-trial motions.

At least 15 people in three states have signed affidavits claiming 70-year-old Harriger molested them as children. But many of those cases are past the statute of limitations.

However, a grand jury has found enough evidence to indict Harriger on charges relating to three children. News 4 has learned that Harriger is accused of molesting a boy and a girl about 12 years ago when he was pastor of the Wesleyan Church in Lyndonville.

The case first came to light last Thanksgiving, when Harriger was arrested by State Police. His own son, George Harriger, told News 4 he was molested as a boy but never realized there were others.

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

Catholic church lawyer to face inquiry after child sex abuse victims’ criticism

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Monday 18 August 2014

After coming under fire from three witnesses at the 16th public hearing of the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, the independent commissioner appointed by the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese to investigate sex abuse claims, Peter O’Callaghan QC, will face the court on Tuesday morning.

He did not appear on day one of the public hearing on Monday after more than two hours of power outages delayed the proceedings.

The court had heard how two men – Father Kevin O’Donnell and Michael Glennon – were responsible for 73 of the 326 sexual abuse complaints upheld by the Melbourne archdiocese.

They were investigated as part of the church’s Melbourne Response scheme established by Cardinal George Pell. That scheme will be the subject of the hearing over the next fortnight, which will hear from many of the victims interviewed by O’Callaghan as part of church investigations.

A witness identified only as AFA told the court how he was sexually abused by Glennon on three separate dates, starting from when he was 15. His case would later be investigated under O’Callaghan.

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.

Teacher faces jail for sexual relationship with teenage student

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 19, 2014

Andrew Thomson

A teacher who split from his wife and started a sexual relationship with a teenage student faces jail.

The 48-year-old teacher, a father of five who had admitted his offending to police, yesterday pleaded guilty in the Warrnambool County Court to nine charges involving the girl, who was 15 and 16 years old at the time.

The victim’s mother said in a victim impact statement her life and relationship with her daughter would never be the same again, the Warrnambool Standard reports.

She said her faith and trust in people of authority had been absolutely shattered and she never suspected such evil from a teacher. …

The teacher, who the court heard had also been a victim of paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale, said the girl was very persuasive and he couldn’t resist her.

The offences were committed at Warrnambool, Port Fairy and other smaller towns in the district.

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.

OH- Alleged sex offender priest challenges law; SNAP responds

OHIO
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

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

A Cleveland Catholic priest is challenging an Ohio law that requires HIV positive adults to disclose their condition to sexual partners.

It seems that no group of sex offenders try harder to overturn sex-related laws more than Catholic priests. We’ve seen accused Catholic clerics challenge indecent exposure, sex offender registry, statutes of limitations and other similar laws. (Next month, for instance, Catholic officials in Hartford Connecticut are seeking to overturn a good statute of limitations law there and replace it with a more predator-friendly one.)

In dozens of cases, we’ve urged Catholic bishops to disclose whether or not they’re paying for lawyers for alleged sex offender priests. Almost always, bishops ignore our requests, even though they have pledged, for at least a dozen years, to be “open” about clergy sex cases.

According to the Plain Dealer, “Fr. James McGonegal is charged with soliciting sex from an undercover ranger at Edgewater Park last October.” We hope Catholic officials are keeping him in treatment, and hope they’ll send him to a credible, independent center for men with sexual difficulties, run by experienced professionals, instead of a discredited church facility run by Catholic clerics.

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.

LCWR: ‘Ongoing conversation with church leadership is key’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Stockman | Aug. 18, 2014

Leaders of the largest organization representing women religious in the United States issued a statement Monday that they will continue the dialogue with church officials demanding reform, but they will also protect the integrity of their group.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious is made up of leaders from religious communities across the nation and represents about 80 percent of the women religious in the U.S. The group held its annual four-day assembly in Nashville, Tenn., last week, where much of the conversation was about the ongoing doctrinal assessment and demands for reform by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Following the assembly, which ended Friday, the LCWR national board held a three-day meeting and on Monday afternoon issued a statement on its work with Seattle Archbishop J. Peter Sartain to implement the mandated reforms. The doctrinal congregation appointed Sartain to oversee the reform efforts.

“Our study, discernment, and prayer led us to reaffirm our strong belief that ongoing conversation with church leadership is key to building effective working relationships that enable both women religious and church leaders to serve the world,” the board said in the statement. “It is our deepest hope to resolve the situation between LCWR and CDF in a way that fully honors our commitment to fulfill the LCWR mission as well as protect the integrity of the organization.”

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.

Boston priest. 86, accused of Pennsylvania abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Pottstown Mercury

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pittsburgh’s bishop has notified parishioners that a retired priest now living in Boston has been accused of molesting a child at a western Pennsylvania parish where he served in 1962 and 1963.

Bishop David Zubik also urged anyone who attended St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth — or five other Pittsburgh-area parishes through 1972 — of the allegations.

The Boston Archdiocese says the Rev. John Carroll lives in a home for retired priests in the Boston area.

The priest also served at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale, and St. Denis in Versailles, which is now part of St. Patrick parish in McKeesport, all in the Pittsburgh diocese.

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

Judge questions the constitutionality of HIV law used to charge Cleveland priest

OHIO
The Plain Dealer

By James F. McCarty, The Plain Dealer
on August 18, 2014

CLEVELAND, Ohio – The soliciting case against a Cleveland priest was thrown into doubt this morning after a judge questioned the constitutionality of the law governing the crime he was charged with.

The Rev. James McGonegal, 69, the former pastor of St. Ignatius of Antioch Church, is charged with soliciting sex from an undercover ranger at Edgewater Park last October.

The charge is a felony because McGonegal is HIV positive, but failed to divulge this to his intended partner.

McGonegal’s scheduled trial in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court today was postponed after defense attorney Henry Hilow asked the judge to consider his argument that the Ohio statute used to charge his client is outdated, and the case should be dismissed.

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.

OH- Therapist hired by diocese loses license

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, August 18, 2014

For more info: Judy Jones (636) 433-2511, SNAPjudy@gmail.com, David Clohessy of St. Louis (314) 566-9790 cell, davidgclohessy@gmail.com

Therapist hired by diocese loses license
He counseled several clergy sex abuse victims
And he was used to evaluate prospective clerics
Board found “{he} acted inappropriately with a client”
SNAP says his recommendations are now “questionable”
Group wants bishop to let victims choose their own therapist

A psychologist who worked for the Youngstown diocese in two roles has lost his license for having an inappropriate and non-professional relationship with an adult client.

Psychologist D. Terence Heltzel, in a four page “consent agreement” with the State Board of Psychology, admitted to having an inappropriate relationship with one of his female clients.

According to the consent decree “The Board received a complaint from an adult female alleging that Dr. Heltzel acted inappropriately towards her during her during her final therapy session.”

“The Board and Dr. Heltzel agree that (he) established a professional psychological psychotherapy relationship with (this client) when (she) sought help following the deaths of two family members (and) entered into a non-professional relationship with (her),” the decree says.

“This psychologist dealt with possible victims and possible predators but is guilty of misconduct himself,” said David Clohessy, director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “Now, already wounded victims have been hurt again because of the very poor choice by Youngstown Catholic officials to hire Heltzel.”

“We suspect that Heltzel has tested and evaluated dozens of prospective Youngstown area priests, seminarians and deacons and maybe lay employees over years and years,” said Judy Jones of SNAP. “Now his judgments about those church staff – and their suitability for employment – are in serious doubt.”

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.

TX- Victims blast Ft. Worth church in abuse case

TEXAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Aug. 15, 2014

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

Members of a Ft. Worth area church cheered as a minister made callous and intimidating comments in a child sex case involving a twice-accused colleague.

Shame on them.

Congregants of Cowboy Way Church cheered and applauded as visiting Pastor Randy Free told them “Our beloved pastor finds himself in the greatest spiritual battle of his life…However there is a silver lining behind this storm cloud … That is that Dan’s God and our God has never lost a battle. And he’s not about to lose this one.”

Shame on Free and everyone who clapped at these insensitive, chilling words. Such hurtful remarks make victims, witnesses and whistleblowers feel frightened and discouraged about reporting known and suspected child sex crimes.

As adults, we face a simple choice. We can make it easier or harder for crime victims to step forward, expose wrongdoers, help police, protect kids and start healing. Members and staff at Cowboy Way Church are making it harder, on teenagers and adults who have been sexually assaulted. And they’re rubbing salt into the already-deep wounds of many crime victims.

It’s very hard for those with information about child sex crimes to speak up. But unless they do, more child molesters hurt more kids. Those at Cowboy Way Church are ignoring this sad reality.

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.

Abusive Priest’s Past Employer on the Hook

OHIO
Courthouse News Service

By JEFF D. GORMAN

(CN) – An Ohio church that failed to report an abusive priest owes damages to the teenager he victimized at his next parish, a state appeals court ruled.

Jessica Simpkins said she was 15 when Brian Williams, the senior pastor at Sunbury Grace Brethren Church, raped her in March 2008. Williams was sent to prison for eight years for two counts of sexual battery.

Before Williams was Sunbury’s pastor, he was the youth pastor at Grace Brethren Church in Delaware, Ohio.

After settling her lawsuit against Sunbury for $90,000, Simpkins sued Delaware Grace and Pastor Darrell Anderson for negligence, breach of fiduciary duty, infliction of emotional distress and failing to report child abuse.

Simpkins alleged that in the early 1990s, Delaware Grace had learned that Williams had inappropriate sexual contact with a minor female but failed to take action.

Delaware Grace had also allegedly learned in 2001 that Williams had inappropriately touched a woman that he was counseling.

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

Church politics:The elephant is definitely in the room

MALTA
Malta Independent

Every institution has its own politics, and the Maltese Church falls squarely in that state of fact. Last week, a former parish priest vented his frustration at being asked to resign his post because the Church was being held to ransom by some parishioners and feast organisers. All too often it takes an incident such as this to point out the elephant in the room. Fr Emanuel Camilleri, who was at Mgarr parish, blurted out that the Church was in a leadership crisis.

Initially, many were flummoxed, it was a bolt out of the blue. But when this newspaper tried to speak to the Curia to get a reaction the next day, we were told that there was no comment to be made. That same day, we were given a full length rebuttal by one of the parish committees that organise the feast there. We were told that the letter was given the ok by the Church.

Still, all seemed to peter out. But yesterday, Fr Camilleri’s beliefs were echoed word for word by the respected Fr Joe Borg in his column in The Times. Fr Borg also calls the issue the “elephant in the room”. He clearly states his doubts about whether the current leadership is up for the job. But before that, he tackles the issue of the Church being out of touch and getting its priorities wrong.

And this is where the main problem lies. Pope Francis has clearly rejuvenated the Catholic faith on a global level. You could also say that his actions – however small – have gone towards restoring people’s faith in humanity.

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.

DA says statute of limitations prevents action against accused priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Bill Zlatos
Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

An expired statute of limitations will keep the Allegheny County District Attorney’s Office from pursuing an allegation of sexual abuse involving a priest and a minor, authorities said Monday.

The district attorney, through a spokesman, endorsed the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh’s handling of such cases, even though the diocese did not act on this allegation for nearly 11 years.

The diocese said it learned of the allegation against the Rev. John P. Carroll on Dec. 9, 2003, from the archdiocese in Boston. The allegation dates to when Carroll was parochial vicar at St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth from 1962 to 1963. He was in the diocese until 1972.

Church officials in Boston informed the Pittsburgh diocese on Aug. 5 that it had begun steps to dismiss him from the priesthood.

“If we are talking about something that is alleged to have taken place in 1962, or in the 10 years after, until this individual was no longer associated with the Diocese of Pittsburgh, the statute of limitations would still prevent us from taking any action on the allegation,” said Mike Manko, spokesman for District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr.

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.

“BLACK TOWN, WHITE POWER” IN FERGUSON

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

A Kansas City judge upheld a $1.1 million award to 42 clergy sex abuse victims in an unprecedented “breach of contract” case against Bishop Robert Finn, who hails from our town. The suit charged Finn violated a 2008 settlement which included non-economic abuse prevention commitments. The only other case in the U.S. is a pending one against the Jesuits over the alleged abuse of a student by Fr. Daniel C. O’Connell, a former St. Louis University president. .

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.

Smyth abuse victim disappointed at Cardinal Brady’s ‘retiring naturally’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Mon, Aug 18, 2014

Abuse victim Brendan Boland (53) has expressed disappointment at the manner of Cardinal Brady’s retirement as Archbishop of Armagh and Catholic Primate of All-Ireland.

The cardinal, who was 75 on Saturday, has submitted his resignation to Rome, as is required of all Catholic bishops when they reach that age. He remains a cardinal for life and may continue to vote in papal elections until August 16th, 2019, when he will be 80.

In 1975 Brendan Boland, then 14, was questioned by canon lawyer Fr John Brady and Dundalk parish priest Msgr Francis Donnelly on allegations he made about being abused by Norbertine priest Fr Brendan Smyth.

Present in support of Brendan Boland was then young Dominican priest Fr Oliver McShane in whom the teenager had first confided about the abuse. Fr McShane has since left the priesthood. At the end of the inquiry Brendan Boland was sworn to secrecy by Fr Brady.

On Cardinal Brady’s letter of resignation, Brendan Boland said yesterday “it’s a long time coming.” He felt “he should have done it back in 2010. Maybe he should not have taken the job at all in 1994 when he found out Smyth was arrested in Northern Ireland”.

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

PA- Victims condemn Pittsburgh bishop for “11 yrs of secrecy”

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Aug. 18, 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 )

For 11 years, Pittsburgh Catholic officials hid the fact that Fr. James P. Carroll is a credibly accused child molester. Yesterday, they finally “came clean” about his crimes. But Pittsburgh church staff said nothing about their callous cover up.

We strongly suspect that Fr. Carroll has spent the past decade living among unsuspecting neighbors who see him as a charming, safe, “grandfatherly” figure. We hope he hasn’t assaulted more kids over these 11 years.

No matter how Catholic officials try to spin it, this is irresponsible and inexcusable. It’s a clear violation of the promises made by Catholic officials – in Pittsburgh and at the national level – to be “open” about clergy sex crimes. Even worse, Pittsburgh Catholic officials, by keeping silent about a potentially dangerous cleric, may have enabled him to hurt more kids.

Two months ago, we disclosed (at a news conference) that Fr. Carroll was a credibly accused child molester.

At that time, back in June, like they have done for years and still do, Pittsburgh Catholic officials said nothing.

Bishop David Zubik’s PR man claims that in 2003, he and his well-educated staff “considered child sexual abuse as a ‘moral defect,’ as it did with alcoholism, rather than a disease,” (according to the Tribune Review). That is insulting baloney.

In 2003, Zubik and other top Pittsburgh Catholic officials knew child sex abuse was a crime. They knew it was apt to be repeated. They knew that citizens have a duty to help police catch criminals. They knew that if they told the truth about Fr. Carroll, more victims might step forward and file charges and Fr. Carroll might be convicted and imprisoned. But they chose – for more than a decade – to stay silent and endanger kids.

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.

SNAP Fundraising Drive: Please Consider Donating

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

[with video]

William D. Lindsey

The critically important support organization for survivors of clerical sexual abuse, SNAP, has a fundraising drive underway right now. I’d like to draw readers’ attention to the drive. As the video at the head of the posting states, at present, SNAP support groups in the U.S. are confined primarily to large urban areas. SNAP is trying to expand its outreach by setting up new support programs in three new cities.

The group is soliciting financial assistance to send two SNAP trainers to those three cities. Please consider helping. The Indiegogo link above has a button that allows you to contribute online.

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Canada- Catholic official pleads guilty to child sex crimes

CANADA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For Immediate Release: Monday, Aug. 18, 2014

Contact: David Clohessy of St. Louis MO 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com, Brenda Brunelle of Windsor, Canada 519 800 3492, windsor@SNAPnetwork.org

Victims urge Catholic group to do outreach
Its former official faces sentencing in sex case
Ottawa man was former head of Catholic youth group
He just pleaded guilty in 1984 child sexual assault case
In 2002, a civil case against him & Knights of Columbus was settled
Group says Knights should prod others who were hurt to “come forward, get help, and call police”

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is urging a Catholic men’s organization to help find others who may have been sexually assaulted by an Ottawa man who pleaded guilty last week to child sex crimes.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests are writing the head of the New Haven Connecticut-based Knights of Columbus, prodding them to “do aggressive outreach” to seek out “others who may have seen, suspected or suffered abuse” by Steve Fagan. For years, Fagan, who pleaded guilty last Monday to sexually assaulting a boy in 1984, was the State Chair of the Knights’ Ontario youth auxiliary.

Fagan will face a sentencing hearing on October 17 and “such outreach may help prosecutors convince the judge to levy an appropriate sentence,” SNAP’s letter said.

“The justice system works best, and kids are protected best, when judges have more information about child molesters before they are punished,” said David Clohessy of SNAP. “If there are others victims of Fagan out there, the least the Knights can do is find them and urge them to contact Crown officials in the next few weeks.”

The Crown is seeking a six month jail sentence, two years’ probation, that Fagan be listed on the sex offender registry.

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Archdiocese Accused of 30-Year Coverup

NEW MEXICO
Courthouse News Service

Monday, August 18, 2014

By VICTORIA PRIESKOP

ALBUQUERQUE (CN) – The Archdiocese of Santa Fe protected a series of pedophile priests in a cover-up lasting at least 30 years, according to three recently filed lawsuits.

The lawsuits in Bernalillo County Court sketch a history of boys between the ages of 9 and 15 being molested by priests who the Archdiocese allegedly knew sexually children, but allowed to work with children nonetheless.

Two of the three plaintiffs claim that the priests had received treatment at the Servants of the Paraclete center in Jemez Springs, N.M., and that the Paraclete center charged an average of $10,000 for the treatment.

The treatment was intended to “cure” priests of sexual attraction to children, but “after some effort at treatment, usually by prayer, these abusers were released into New Mexico parishes and communities and hired by [the Archdiocese of Santa Fe],” John Doe D claims in his complaint.

John Doe D’s lawsuit lists the names of 40 priests, including an archbishop, who the archdiocese allegedly admitted “have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse.” The abuse allegedly occurred from the 1950s through the 1990s.

John Doe D claims that the archdiocese knew that its “culture of the day include(ed) a ratio of pedophile priests to non-pedophile priests of about 40 percent in the decades preceding and including plaintiff’s birth and childhood.”

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Boston priest. 86, accused of Pennsylvania abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
WTAE

PITTSBURGH —Pittsburgh’s bishop has notified parishioners that a retired priest now living in Boston has been accused of molesting a child at a western Pennsylvania parish where he served in 1962 and 1963.

Bishop David Zubik also urged anyone who attended St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth — or five other Pittsburgh-area parishes through 1972 — of the allegations.

The Boston Archdiocese says the Rev. John Carroll lives in a home for retired priests in the Boston area.

The priest also served at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale, and St. Denis in Versailles, which is now part of St. Patrick parish in McKeesport, all in the Pittsburgh diocese.

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Israel to extradite suspected haredi sex abuser to Australia

ISRAEL
The Jerusalem Post

By SAM SOKOL
08/18/2014

NEW YORK- An Israeli-Australian dual citizen wanted for allegedly sexually abusing several teenaged girls was arrested and is slated to be extradited to Australia.

Malka Leifer, an ultra-orthodox woman living in Emmanuel, was the principal of the Adas school in Melbourne between 2001 and 2008. She stands accused of engaging in sexual behavior with a number of students, including three sisters. She left Australia after being fired by a local school board.

“Ms Leifer is wanted to face prosecution in Victoria for alleged sexual assault offenses,” The Age quoted a spokesperson for the Australian Attorney General.

The arrest is the result of legal action initiated by a victim seeking compensation from Leifer, resulting in an extradition request filed in a Jerusalem district court by the Israeli AG’s international department.

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Former Adass Israel School principal Malka Leifer faces extradition over alleged sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 18, 2014

Jewel Topsfield
Education Editor for The Age

The former head of an Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne will be extradited to Australia to face charges of sexually abusing her students.

Malka Leifer, a former principal of the Adass Israel School in Elsternwick, fled to Israel in 2008 after the school board sacked her following complaints of inappropriate conduct with students.

The Australian Attorney-General’s Department said Mrs Leifer had been arrested in Israel in response to an extradition request made by Australia.

“Ms Leifer is wanted to face prosecution in Victoria for alleged sexual assault offences,” a spokesperson said.

The Israeli news website Ynet reported overnight that a resident of Emmanuel, a settlement town in the West Bank, was arrested on Sunday.

It said the woman was suspected of sexually abusing three sisters at an Orthodox high school in Melbourne between 2004 and 2008.

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Former principal of Adass Israel School …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Former principal of Adass Israel School in Melbourne arrested over alleged sexual abuse

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN AUGUST 18, 2014

A FORMER principal of a Melbourne Jewish girls’ school has been arrested amid claims she sexually abused students including sisters.

Malka Leifer was arrested in Israel overnight where it is believed extradition proceedings have started in an attempt to have her returned to Melbourne.

The Attorney General’s office confirmed this morning Ms Leifer is wanted in Melbourne to face allegations of historic sexual offending against a string of girls.

The mother of eight left Australia in 2008 after she was sacked as principal at the ultra orthodox Adass Israel School in Elsternwick.

The sacking followed complaints that she had acted inappropriately with students while principal between 2001 and 2008.

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“Let a female speculate”: Full text of Sister Elizabeth Johnson’s LCWR talk

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

David Gibson | August 17, 2014

Sister Elizabeth Johnson accepted an award on Friday night (Aug. 15) from the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the umbrella organization for most of the 50,000 Catholic nuns in the U.S. The LCWR has for two years been the target of an investigation by the Vatican over a range of perceived problems with their doctrinal views and their social justice mission. The sisters reject the accusations.

The investigation is a source of much controversy, and despite signs that it might ease under Pope Francis, the polemics reignited a few months ago when a top Vatican cardinal blasted the nuns for announcing that they would honor Sister Johnson — whose work theologians from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops have sharply criticized — at their annual meeting last week in Nashville.

In addition to our story on the conference, we also have the full text of Sister Johnson’s talk:

Leadership Conference of Women Religious
Remarks for Leadership Award Dinner
Nashville, TN, August 15, 2014
Elizabeth A. Johnson, CSJ

I. Thank you so much. To quote Shakespeare in “Twelfth Night”:

I can no other answer make but thanks,
And thanks, and ever thanks. (Act 3, scene 3)

It is a beautiful honor to receive this award from you, faithful women with whom I share the vocation of being a woman religious in the church today. You are truly my Sisters! You could have chosen from among so many other women religious exercising leadership today in so many different venues. I am awed by your tribute and humbled to join the ranks of previous recipients.

A shout-out to my sister Susan and brother-in-law Stephen who are joining us tonight from Oregon, as well as my dear friend Cathy Hilkert OP from the University of Notre Dame, and other good friends and members of my Brentwood leadership team.

This award is recognizing leadership I have exercised in the ministry of theology. In truth, I would never have become a theologian were it not for the leaders of my own religious community. This vocation within a vocation was simply not on my radar. But Mother Immaculata Maria sent me to study for a Masters, and subsequent General Superiors sent me for the doctorate and helped me discern whether to take a faculty position at Catholic University. They thought the church needed women to teach theology and sensed my interest. From them to our current President Helen Kearney and her recent public supportive statements, the care from my leaders has been unceasing.

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The church protected Fr Kevin O’Donnell for 50 years — and then it avoided paying proper compensation to victims

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 17 August 2014)

One of Australia’s most prolific child-abuse criminals, Father Kevin O’Donnell, was harboured in the Melbourne Catholic archdiocese for fifty years. In his final years, he even received public praise from one of his superiors, Bishop (later Cardinal) George Pell.

O’Donnell is dead but his numerous victims — and their families — still bear the scars of his crimes.

Father Kevin O’Donnell was a child abuser from 1942 to 1992. He fitted Masses, weddings and funerals in between his sex-abuse activities.

The Catholic Church now admits that O’Donnell was a child-abuser from day one. Broken Rites has seen a typed transcript of an interview that Mr Peter O’Callaghan QC (sex-abuse commissioner for the Melbourne archdiocese) had with an O’Donnell victim on 23 March 2003. In the transcript, Mr O’Callaghan commented that O’Donnell was engaged in sex abuse from the time he was ordained — and (said Mr O’Callaghan) he did it in every parish he was in.

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El arzobispo que fue procesado

ARGENTINA
Pagina 12

[Summary: Archbishop Guillermo Jose Garlatti of Bahia Blanca was indicted yesterday for concealing former chaplain Aldo Vara during the eight months he was a fugitive from justice. Vara was charged with crimes against humanity.]

Por Diego Martínez

El arzobispo de Bahía Blanca, Guillermo José Garlatti, fue procesado ayer por el encubrimiento agravado del ex capellán Aldo Vara durante los ocho meses que estuvo prófugo de la Justicia. El juez federal subrogante Alvaro Coleffi consideró probado que Garlatti omitió informarle sobre el Fondo Integral de Solidaridad (Fides) que el arzobispado le siguió pagando a Vara mientras el Estado ofrecía una recompensa para capturarlo y que ocultó también otros datos útiles para la búsqueda, descubiertos en el allanamiento a la Curia. El magistrado sostuvo que el arzobispo intentó durante su indagatoria “explicar lo inexplicable”, al sostener que “no pensó” o “no se le ocurrió” que los datos que ocultaba fueran valiosos para la Justicia y lo procesó también por el delito de desobediencia. El empresario Leopoldo Bochile, ex apoderado de Vara, quien murió poco después de su detención en Paraguay, fue procesado por encubrimiento.

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Paedophile Peter Righton advised Home Office on policy

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

By Tom Bateman
BBC Radio 4 Today reporter

A paedophile at the centre of a forthcoming historical abuse inquiry advised the Home Office on changes to the residential child care system.

Peter Righton gave “considerable assistance” as an expert in child care to a government report in 1970.

He had earlier left a teaching job over complaints of child abuse. He later became a member of a pro-paedophile campaign group. Righton died in 2007.

The Home Office said it was “absolutely committed” to stamping out child abuse.

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Fordham Theologian Criticizes Church’s Investigation of Women’s Orders

UNITED STATES
The Chronicle of Higher Education

August 18, 2014 by Charles Huckabee

A theologian and nun who drew the ire of U.S. Roman Catholic bishops with a book they considered radical and flawed fired back on Friday, saying the church’s investigation of women’s orders was “unconscionable” at a time when the hierarchy’s moral authority has been eroded by financial and child-abuse scandals, the Religion News Service reported.

Speaking in Nashville, Tenn., as she accepted an award from the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, Sister Elizabeth A. Johnson, a professor of theology at Fordham University, lambasted the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ criticism of her 2007 book Quest for the Living God: Mapping Frontiers in the Theology of God, published by Continuum. The book saw a spike in sales in 2011 after the bishops issued a statement saying the work contained “misrepresentations, ambiguities, and errors.”

In her remarks on Friday, Sister Johnson said she suspected that the bishops had not read the book. “To this day, no one, not myself or the theological community, the media, or the general public, knows what doctrinal issue is at stake,” she said.

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“Sacerdotes violadores abusan de su libertad”

MEXICO
Pulso

[Summary: The recent case of alleged sexual abuse by a priest in the Fatima church rectory is due to misuse of freedom, according to Archbishop Jesus Carlos Cabrero Romero of San Luis Potosi. The archbishop said during an interview after noon Mass that it is like when Judas betrayed Jesus Christ. Priest Jose de Jesus Cruz Rodriguez is accused of trying to sexually abuse a minor.]

Rubén Pacheco / Pulso

El reciente caso de presunto abuso sexual cometido por un sacerdote en la casa parroquial del templo de Fátima, se debe al mal uso de la libertad, señaló el arzobispo de San Luis Potosí, Jesús Carlos Cabrero Romero.

Considera el prelado que San Luis Potosí no es un ejemplo de cómo actuar ante actos de pederastia clerical.

Después de oficiar la tradicional misa dominical de mediodía, en entrevista, el arzobispo ejemplificó que al igual que cuando Judas traicionó a Jesucristo, el cura José de Jesús Cruz Rodríguez, acusado de intentar abusar sexualmente de un joven, probablemente hizo mal uso de su libertad como párroco.

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Former Catholic school teacher, football coach arrested on sex abuse charges

KENTUCKY
WLKY

[with video]

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —A former St. Raphael Catholic School teacher and Trinity football coach is now facing sex abuse charges.

Philip Dale Anderson, 56, is accused of sexually abusing a student while he worked for the Archdiocese of Louisville.

Anderson, who now lives in Somerset, was arrested Friday afternoon at a restaurant on Brownsboro Road.

Police said the abuse allegedly took place around 30 years ago, when the student was between 11 and 14 years old.

Anderson spent a dozen years at St. Raphael’s parish in the upper Highlands neighborhood between 1981 and 1993 and also coached football at Trinity High School during that time.

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WA priest on trial for child sex offences

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

A Catholic priest denies raping a West Australian teenager more than 30 years ago but admits he has done some wrong things, a court has heard.

Glenn Humphreys, 61, is charged with abusing a boy between 1983 and 1986, when the boy was aged 15 to 17.

Defence lawyer Seamus Rafferty told the Perth District Court it was not disputed that on a few occasions in 1986, Humphreys had engaged in inappropriate behaviour.
But at the time, his actions were lawful and involved mutual touching, Mr Rafferty said in his opening statement.

Prosecutor James MacTaggart said Humphreys had indecently assaulted the victim without consent on several occasions while he was the assistant parish priest at a church in the southern suburb of Rockingham.

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Priests demand clarification from archbishop

GUAM
KUAM

by Sabrina Salas Matanane

Guam – There are new developments to report in the ongoing controversy in the local Catholic church as several priests have written a letter to Archbishop Anthony Apuron demanding clarification to statements he made in a press release to the media regarding the removal of Monsignor James Benavente.

Father Tom McGrath, Father Jeff San Nicolas, Father Mike Crisostomo, Father Patrick Castro and Father Gus Gumataotao are the latest in a string of faithful members of the island’s Catholic community seeking answers and clarification from the archbishop specifically on the removal of Monsignor Benavente. Just a week after the monsignor’s 20-year celebration of faith and service, the archbishop removed him from his duties as the rector of the Archdiocese of Agana and the director of Catholic Cemeteries.

The archbishop removed the monsignor based on allegations of financial mismanagement. His sudden ouster created an uproar in the local church many of whom gathered in prayer on the footsteps of the cathedral. Andy Balajadia said at the time, “We are losing confidence and trust in his leadership. I hope that by praying he will change.”

Others who have worked alongside the monsignor on the church’s finances also took the steps of the cathedral to defend the reputation of Monsignor James. “We felt compelled to speak out after the archbishop issued a statement accusing Monsignor James of financial practices that were grave and detrimental to the archdiocese nothing is further from the truth,” he said.

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Royal commission: Catholic Church urged to show ‘moral compass’ ahead of clergy sexual abuse hearings

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Catholic Church is being urged to show its “moral compass” as an inquiry resumes in Melbourne into alleged child sexual abuse by priests.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will hear from victims and representatives of the church, including Cardinal George Pell, who is scheduled to give evidence via video link from the Vatican on Thursday.

The church has moved to change its long-standing policy on the way it handles sexual abuse cases, but compensation and redress for victims remains an issue.

The Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) is pushing for a national independent redress scheme.

In the short term, chief executive officer Leonie Sheedy wants churches and charities to start contributing to a fund, primarily to pay the funeral expenses of victims.

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Vic victim wants compassion from church

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Abuse victim Paul Hersbach doesn’t want an apology from the Catholic Church. He doesn’t want the church to burn. He just wants compassion.

Mr Hersbach was sexually abused for three years during the 1980s by the same Catholic priest who had also abused his father and uncle.

Father Victor Gabriel Rubeo had lived with the Hersbach family, was known to the children as “gramps” and even had a cap with the phrase “Super Gramps” embroidered on it.

But when Mr Hersbach made a complaint to the Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response scheme for abuse victims in 2006, he said he felt like he was being interrogated.

Mr Hersbach told the child sex abuse royal commission in Melbourne he wants the church to show some compassion.

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Victims speak out on Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

August 18, 2014

CAMERON HOUSTON AND JANE LEE

Victims of clerical abuse have told the Royal Commission that the Catholic Church’s response was primarily concerned with avoiding civil litigation and limiting compensation payouts.

The church was urged to reform its controversial Melbourne Response and review all of the 326 cases it has settled since the system was introduced in 1996 by former archbishop of Melbourne George Pell.

The commission was told on Monday that the church paid $17.2 million in ex gratia payments for child sexual abuse claims over the past 18 years, which included medical and counselling expenses. Victims received an average payout of $36,100.

The cost of administering the Melbourne Response was more than $17 million, which included $7.7 million to Independent Commissioner Peter O’Callaghan, QC, and his staff.

Serial paedophile priest Kevin O’Donnell was responsible for the largest number of payouts, with 50 victims receiving compensation for abuse spanning from 1944 to 1992.

Chrissie Foster told a packed room in Melbourne’s County Court that O’Donnell was directly responsible for the suicide of her eldest daughter Emma and the permanent brain damage sustained by her daughter Katie in a car accident.

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Church response to Melbourne victims of child sexual abuse ‘a betrayal’

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Monday 18 August 2014

Victims have told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse that the scheme established by the Catholic archdiocese of Melbourne to investigate their claims lacked compassion and independence and left them feeling betrayed.

During an emotional day marred by a power blackout that delayed the hearing by more than two hours, victims also questioned the so-called independence of commissioners appointed by the church to investigate sex abuse claims, and spoke of feeling pressured by senior church officials into meeting them and accepting compensation.

The hearing taking place in Melbourne over the next fortnight is scrutinising the scheme, known as the Melbourne Response, established by Cardinal George Pell in 1996.

Reading her witness statement on Monday morning, Chrissie Foster described how two of her three daughters, Katie and Emma, were repeatedly abused by Father Kevin O’Donnell at Sacred Heart primary school in Oakleigh. At times her husband, Anthony, took over reading for her.

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When the abused come to the royal commission, they don’t swear on the Bible

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

David Marr
theguardian.com, Monday 18 August 2014

It’s a telling detail: when the abused come to the witness box of the royal commission, they affirm.

They were born deep inside the church to families that never missed mass and sent their kids to the parish primary school over the road. But they don’t swear on the Bible when they come to give their testimony.

Chrissie Foster affirmed. She was the first witness on the first day of the first Melbourne sitting of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. She deserved her place at the top of the billing.

Two of her children were raped by Father Kevin O’Donnell, not in the dark ages but in suburban Melbourne in the 1990s. One is dead, the other is permanently incapacitated. The church, though it had known about O’Donnell’s criminal ways for at least 30 years, tried to fob off Chrissie and her husband Anthony with pastoral rhetoric and a few dollars.

It’s hard to imagine this commission ever having been called but for the Fosters’ implacable and dignified pursuit of the church. They never lost their tempers. Their good humour has somehow survived. Their judgment has seemed impeccable at every turn.

Twelve years ago, when their campaign began, they went shyly on television in disguise. But the resistance of the church compelled them to put their names and faces to the story of their daughters’ abuse and their own mistreatment. They have told it so many times but what they always wanted was a royal commission and now they stood side by side in the witness box to tell their story all over again.

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Royal Commission witness testimony

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

August 18, 2014

Jane Lee and Cameron Houston

Paul Hersbach kept his composure until the end.

He, like all the 321 victims of child sexual abuse who have lodged claims to the Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response, had been forced to tell their stories to strangers before.

The first time he spoke about his abuse in detail, it was to two people at Carelink, the Melbourne Response’s counselling arm, to explain why he needed access to its services as a primary victim, not a secondary victim. He found this confronting and “exceptionally traumatic”.

“I feel I told them more than I needed to and far more than I believe was reasonably required for them to do their job.”

Mr Hersbach explained how the man he once called “gramps” had sexually abused his father, uncle, brother and himself when he was a child.

Victor Rubeo, who died on the day he was to appear in court for a committal hearing over charges of sexual abuse, “inserted” himself between father and son over 16 years.

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Child sex abuse royal commission…

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

Child sex abuse royal commission: Catholic priest abused two generations of boys in the same family, inquiry hears

BY LOUISE MILLIGAN
August 18, 2014

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard a devastating account of how a Catholic priest preyed on two generations of boys in the same family.

Tony Hersbach and his twin brother Will were molested by Father Victor Rubeo in Melbourne in the 1960s.

The priest then abused Tony’s two sons, Paul and Adam, in the 1980s.

Paul Hersbach gave evidence to the commission today and he and his father gave an exclusive interview to the ABC’s 7.30 program about how the domineering and charismatic priest managed to take hold and control their family.

“He was like a father, but like an incestuous father, so he had this real dark, secret side,” Tony told 7.30.

“And you know, in our family life, he was able to do whatever he wanted to. He basically took over.”

Paul said: “We called him Grandpa, which… bothers me a lot.

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Abuse victim felt he couldn’t go to police

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

BY ANGUS LIVINGSTON AND GENEVIEVE GANNON
August 18, 2014

The victim of a pedophile priest was discouraged from going to police and felt he had to take a Catholic Church payout, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

The church has paid a combined $17 million in compensation to abuse victims in the Melbourne archdiocese, but only 119 of the 326 upheld complaints have been dealt with by police.

Victims told the royal commission they felt betrayed by the church’s Melbourne Response process, which they said lacked compassion, and called for the $75,000 cap on compensation payments to be scrapped.

A victim of pedophile priest Father Michael Glennon said Melbourne Response independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan told him the prospects of Glennon doing any more jail time were low and he might not be charged.

“I felt Mr O’Callaghan was trying to discourage me from going to the police,” the man told the commission on Monday.

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Teaching credentials…

UNITED STATES
Questions from a Ewe

Food for thought:

* Imagine your English teacher demonstrating mastery of the language by regularly uttering statements like this, “We seen them deer when we was up north!”
* Imagine your mathematics teacher regularly adding numbers incorrectly.
* Imagine your social studies teacher talking about visiting “Toledo, the capital of the U.S.”
* Imagine your music teacher with an inability to count rhythms correctly or carry a tune.

Now try to imagine yourself valuing these teachers’ lessons. In each case, regardless of the theory expressed, actions belied their true subject-matter expertise to the point you probably justifiably questioned their credibility…a lot… Their actions told you, “I am not qualified to teach about this.”

Now:

* Imagine your Catholic faith teacher, who professes to know more than you about truth, being exposed as a liar.
* Imagine your faith teacher confusing the commandment about adultery with those about murder or stealing.
* Imagine your faith teacher enabling and covering up clergy’s sexual abuse of minors but writing the Church’s norms to protect children.

Such is the case with the Catholic hierarchy and sexual abuse. The bishops declare themselves the ultimate teaching authorities on faith yet, on a weekly basis we read of bishops being caught telling lies or enabling abusers. We live with the appalling reality that bishops equate raping children to an adulterous affair, though rape is about forcefully taking that which is not given and destroying the child’s physical, emotional and spiritual life in the process. Perhaps lesser known, the primary authors of the US bishops’ charter to protect children, themselves harbored sexually abusive priests even after the charter was signed. What is most puzzling of all is that a) the bishops think anyone should take them seriously as moral authorities and b) that anyone does.

Here are just a smattering of proof points:

1. Archbishop John Nienstedt of Minneapolis said in an April, 2014 sworn legal deposition that he didn’t know until March, 2014 that Ken LaVan, a priest with multiple credible sexual abuse accusations, was still in active ministry. However, this past week revealed that ole John was actually getting annual updates about Ken’s ministry activities.

Psst….John, this is called “lying” and violates the 8th Commandment: “Thou shall not bear false witness.” John, I gotta tell ya, this really kills your street creds in the truth department. Plus, when you lie under oath in this country, it is also called a “crime” further crumbling your “truthiness” credibility. Much like Dr. Seuss’ book calling for another liar to depart public leadership, “Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now!”, I think it’s beyond time we say, “John C. Nienstedt Will You Please Go Now!”

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Sex abuse victims paid $17 million by Catholic Church, royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN AUGUST 18, 2014

MELBOURNE’S Catholic Church has paid victims of clerical sexual abuse more than $17 million since introducing an interntal compensation panel, the child abuse royal commission has heard.

Sitting in Melbourne for the first time the commission heard this morning ex-gratia payments made under the church’s Melbourne Response scheme totalled $17,259,472.

Of that almost $10 million was paid as compensation while $7.5 million was paid to cover victims’s medical and counselling costs.

A further $1.6 million was paid to victims outside of the Melbourne Response.

The internal complaints system is being scrutinised in the royal commission’s latest public hearing.

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Christine Foster ‘betrayed’ by George Pell abuse apology and church warning

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AUGUST 18, 2014

Pia Akerman
Reporter
Melbourne

THE mother of two girls who were abused by one of Victoria’s most notorious paedophile priests has told how she felt “betrayed” by receiving an apology from then Archbishop George Pell as well as a warning against litigation in the same month.

The royal commission investigating institutional responses to child sexual abuse has begun a two-week hearing probing the Melbourne Response, through which the Catholic Melbourne archdiocese offered financial compensation and counselling to abuse victims.

Counsel assisting the commission Gail Furness SC told the crowded courtroom there had been no formal or external review of the Melbourne Response since it began in 1996.

The church has paid $11.3 million in compensation since the Melbourne Response began, with $1.6m of that figure for claims outside the Melbourne Response process.

Nearly 20 per cent of all compensation paid by the Melbourne Response relates to a single priest, Kevin O’Donnell, who was found responsible for 50 abuse complaints including from Emma and Katie Foster, who were students at his parish school in Oakleigh.

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Catholic church’s Melbourne Response under review for first time

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Melissa Davey
theguardian.com, Sunday 17 August 2014

Cardinal George Pell introduced the Melbourne Response to sexual abuse cases in the Catholic church because victims were not being treated in a compassionate and consistent way, he will tell the royal commission.

The method of handling sexual abuse cases by the Catholic archdiocese of Melbourne was introduced in 1996 by Pell, the most senior member of the Catholic church in Australia. It is under review for the first time since its inception in 1996.

Pell, now the Vatican’s financial controller, will give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse via video link on Thursday. His argument was outlined on Monday morning by counsel assisting the commission, Gail Furness.

She said church lawyer Richard Leder and archbishop of Melbourne, Denis Hart, would also give evidence about how the scheme operated.

Furness said the commission would scrutinise the appointment by the church of independent commissioners to investigate sex abuse allegations; a free counselling and professional support service provided to victims, known as Carelink; and the compensation panel which provided ex gratia compensation payments to victims.

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Victims want review into Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response compensation claims

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 18, 2014

Jane Lee and Cameron Houston

Victims have called for all 351 compensation claims to the Catholic Church’s Melbourne Response to be reviewed and have accused the process as lacking compassion and transparency on the opening day of the Royal Commission.

Paul Hersbach told the Commission on Monday that his father, uncle, brother and himself had been abused by Father Victor Rubeo, who the family had referred to as ‘Gramps’ which had been embroidered on his hat.

“I do not need or want a personal apology. I do not want the church burned down,” he said. “All I want is for someone from the Catholic Church to show compassion and give me a call one day and say ‘Hi Paul how are you going these days?..Can I do anything to help?'”

When Mr Hersbach sought compensation from the church, he said that he was discouraged by independent commissioner Peter O’Callaghan, QC, from reporting his abuse to police because he “didn’t think anything would happen”. Six weeks later he received a letter from Mr O’Callaghan saying “with respect to the unsurprising haziness of your memory there would not appear to be much point in your taking the matter to the Police”.

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Child sex abuse royal commission: Child abuse claims in Victoria cost Catholic Church $34m, inquiry hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Child abuse claims in Victoria since 1996 have cost the Catholic Church more than $34 million, an inquiry has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is investigating the church’s so-called Melbourne response to allegations of child sexual abuse by its clergy.

The scheme was introduced by Cardinal Pell when he was Melbourne’s archbishop in 1996, and was a first of its kind.

It allowed anyone allegedly abused by priests or others under the authority of the archbishop to have what the church called “an independent commissioner” to investigate their claims and make findings.

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August 17, 2014

Ex-SWHS coach charged with sexual abuse

KENTUCKY
Commonwealth Journal

BY JEFF NEAL
COMMONWEALTH JOURNAL

Former Southwestern High School football coach Dale Anderson was arrested Friday night in Louisville on charges that he sexually abused a young boy over two decades ago.

Anderson, 55, was taken into custody outside a Louisville restaurant, according to a Louisville Metro Police citation, and charged with sodomy, attempted sodomy and sexual abuse.

According to the citation, the alleged victim — now an adult — claimed Anderson sexually abused him beginning when he was 11 years old. The abuse continued until he was approximately 14, according to the citation.

“The (alleged) victim disclosed oral sex, forceful attempted anal sodomy and sexual touching,” according to the citation.

The alleged victim told Louisville Metro Police the abuse occurred when Anderson was a teacher and coach at St. Raphael Catholic School in Louisville. Anderson left the Louisville area to take the Southwestern job in 1993.

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Former student alleges abuse by former St. Raphael teacher, coach

KENTUCKY
WAVE

Updated: Aug 17, 2014
By John Paxton

LOUISVILLE, KY (WAVE) – A former teacher and football coach at St. Raphael Catholic School has been arrested on suspicion of sexually abusing a former student.

According to court records, the accuser, now an adult, says the abuse started around age 11 and continued until about age 14.

Philip Dale Anderson Jr. is charged with sodomy, attempted sodomy and sexual abuse. He was taken into custody Friday at 2 p.m. at Austin’s Restaurant on Brownsboro Road.

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Sex charges for ex-St. Raphael teacher

OUISVILLE (KY)
The Courier-Journal

Charlie White, cwhite@courier-journal.com August 17, 2014

A former teacher at St. Raphael Catholic School and football coach at Trinity High School was arrested after a man told Louisville Metro Police he was sexually abused as a boy.

Philip D. Anderson Jr., 56, was arrested Friday afternoon on charges of sodomy, attempted sodomy and sexual abuse, said Dwight Mitchell, a police spokesman.

The victim told police he was between the ages of 11 and 14 when he was abused by Anderson when he was a student at the parish school in Louisville’s Upper Highlands neighborhood, Mitchell said.

Police took Anderson, who now lives in Somerset, Ky., to Metro Corrections after arresting him, Mitchell said.

A Metro Corrections records room worker said Anderson was released late Friday night on his own recognizance. His court arraignment date wasn’t immediately known.

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Vatican Circus in SKorea…

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

August 16, 2014

Paris Arrow

Vatican is apex of materialism

The Vatican Circus for Idiot Catholics is in full swing in South Korea for 5 days and Pope Francis – the Pretender and Impostor of Jesus and biggest thief in mankind’s history – and fattest clown-in-white is busy deceiving South Koreans idiot Catholics especially the youth – with his classic hypocrisy and papal farts of pathological lies concocted by the Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team. On Friday, he met with young people of the Asian Youth Day (a version of World Youth Day of Satanas St. John Paul II) where he told them to “combat the allure of materialism that stifles authentic spiritual and cultural values and the spirit of unbridled competition which generates selfishness and strife” and to “reject inhuman economic models which create new forms of poverty and marginalize workers.”

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Pell to speak to royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

One of the world’s first child abuse compensation schemes will be scrutinised when the Child Abuse Royal Commission sits in Melbourne this morning.

The Melbourne Response, introduced in 1996, was the one of the Catholic Church’s first redress schemes for victims of paedophile priests.

The commission will hear from Cardinal George Pell via video link from the Vatican on Thursday about his involvement in setting up the scheme and in responding to allegations of child sex abuse in Melbourne where he is archbishop in the 1990s.

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Priest placed on administrative leave over abuse claim

PENNSYLVANIA
Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Catholic
Posted: Tues., Aug. 12, 2014

Pittsburgh Catholic Staff Report

Bishop David Zubik has placed Father John Fitzgerald, 66, the pastor of Our Lady of Peace Parish in Conway, Beaver County, on administrative leave pending further investigation into an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor.

This action was taken the day after diocesan officials met with an individual who alleged abuse by Father Fitzgerald in the late 1990s. Diocesan officials immediately reported the allegation to the district attorneys of Allegheny County and Lawrence County because the abuse was alleged to have occurred in both jurisdictions.

Prior to this, no other allegation of sexual abuse against Father Fitzgerald has come to the diocese’s notice. Father Fitzgerald has denied committing any acts of sexual abuse. While he is on administrative leave he cannot administer the sacraments, dress in clerical attire or identify himself as a priest.

A letter from Bishop Zubik was read at all Masses Aug. 2-3 at Our Lady of Peace, and a diocesan official answered questions afterward. A copy of the letter will be mailed to all the parishioners.

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Allegation of abuse surfaces against former Pittsburgh priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 17, 2014

A priest in the Archdiocese of Boston has been accused of sexually abusing a minor while he was a priest in the Pittsburgh area in the early 1970s.

The Diocese of Pittsburgh announced today that the allegation against the Rev. John P. Carroll concerns when he was assigned to Saint Michael Parish in Elizabeth Township from 1962 to 1963.

The victim made the allegation directly to the Archdiocese of Boston, according to a news release issued by the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

Pittsburgh Bishop David A. Zubik wrote this weekend to Saint Michael Parish and all parishes where Father Carroll served while in the Diocese of Pittsburgh informing them of the allegation.

Bishop Zubik said his purpose in writing “is to discover whether anyone else may have an allegation against Father Carroll or anyone who was acting in the name of the church.”

Father Carroll served in the Diocese of Pittsburgh from 1962 to 1972. In addition to his assignment as a parochial vicar at Saint Michael, Father Carroll served at St. Isaac Jogues, Elrama; Saint Margaret, Greentree; Saint Susanna, Penn Hills; Saint Alphonsus, Springdale; and Saint Denis, Versailles (now Saint Patrick, McKeesport).

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Pastor’s Pen – August 10, 2014

MISSOURI
St. Ann Catholic Church

From our Archbishop:

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I have accepted the recommendation of the Review Board of the Archdiocese of St. Louis in its determination that a report alleging the sexual abuse of a minor by the late Father Alexander Lippert in the early 1970s is considered credible. Father Lippert died in April 2000, prior to any allegations being made against him. Although he is unable to offer a defense, the allegation against Fr. Lippert is considered “credible though unsubstantiated” because there was enough evidence to conclude that the abuse could have occurred as reported.

Father Lippert’s priestly assignments in the Archdiocese of St. Louis were as follows:

April 1956 Assistant pastor, Holy Guardian Angels
July 1959 Immaculate Conception, Union
1961 St. Liborius
1963 St. Teresa (in residence)
1965 St. Ferdinand, Florissant (in residence)
May 1968 St. Aloysius, Spanish Lake
July 1970 Requested leave of absence; took up residence at St. Paul the Apostle, Pine Lawn
June 1980 Associate pastor, Basilica of Saint Louis, King of France
Nov. 1980 Administrator, St. Catherine of Alexandria, Coffman
May 1983 Associate pastor, St. Ambrose
April 1986 Associate pastor, St. Thomas of Aquinas
July 1988 Sick leave
Jan. 1991 Relieved of priestly duties and granted retirement.

Anyone who wishes to make a report of the sexual abuse of a minor by Father Lippert or by any other priest, deacon or employee of the Archdiocese of St. Louis may contact De-con Phil Hengen, Director of Child and Youth Protection, Archdiocese of St. Louis at 314.792.7704 or phengen@archstl.org. Reports may also be made to the Missouri Division of Social Services Child Abuse Hotline at 800.392.3738 for allegations involving a person who is currently under the age of 18, or to civil authorities for allegations involving a person who is now an adult, but was abused as a minor.

Sincerely yours in Christ,

Most Reverend Robert J. Carlson
Archbishop of St. Louis

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Priest accused of molesting child in Elizabeth 50 years ago

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Bill Zlatos
Sunday, Aug. 17, 2014

Authorities are investigating a claim that a Boston priest molested a child in Elizabeth more than 50 years ago.

The Rev. John P. Carroll, a priest from the Archdiocese of Boston, has been accused of sexually abusing a minor while he was assigned at St. Michael Parish in Elizabeth, officials of the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh disclosed Sunday.

They learned about the allegation from Boston church officials Aug. 5 and alerted authorities here.
Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik warned St. Michael Parish and all the parishes where Carroll served of the allegation in a letter this weekend.

“I urge anyone who has been abused by any person representing the church to notify civil authorities and to contact the diocese to obtain assistance with counseling to help with recovery from abuse,” Zubik wrote.

Carroll worked at the Pittsburgh Diocese from 1962 to 1972, including his stint at St. Michael. He also worked at St. Isaac Jogues in Elrama, St. Margaret in Green Tree, St. Susanna in Penn Hills, St. Alphonsus in Springdale and St. Denis in Versailles, now called St. Patrick in McKeesport.

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Sister Acts

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

Nicholas Kristof

IN an age of villainy, war and inequality, it makes sense that we need superheroes. And after trying Superman, Batman and Spider-Man, we may have found the best superheroes yet: Nuns.

“I may not believe in God, but I do believe in nuns,” writes Jo Piazza, in her forthcoming book, “If Nuns Ruled the World.” Piazza is an agnostic living in New York City who began interviewing nuns and found herself utterly charmed and inspired.

“They eschew the spotlight by their very nature, and yet they’re out there in the world every day, living the Gospel and caring for the poor,” Piazza writes. “They don’t hide behind fancy and expensive vestments, a pulpit, or a sermon. I have never met a nun who rides a Mercedes-Benz or a Cadillac. They walk a lot; they ride bikes.”

One of the most erroneous caricatures of nuns is that they are prim, Victorian figures cloistered in convents. On the contrary, I’ve become a huge fan of nuns because I see them so often risking their lives around the world, confronting warlords, pimps and thugs, while speaking the local languages fluently. In a selfish world, they epitomize selflessness and compassion.

There are also plenty of formidable nuns whom even warlords don’t want to mess with, who combine reverence with ferocity, who defy the Roman Catholic Church by handing out condoms to prostitutes to protect them from H.I.V. (They surely don’t mention that to the bishops.)

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New sex abuse case rocks church

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 18, 2014

Cameron Houston and Chris Vedelago

The Catholic Church has expelled an inner-Melbourne priest after allegations of sexual impropriety as the sex abuse royal commission begins its Melbourne hearings into decades of abuse and alleged cover-ups.

The disclosure that the priest’s alleged victim received a financial settlement from the church and refused to assist police has led to the accusation that the church paid hush money. Father Mato Krizanac, 60, of the Croatian Catholic Centre at St Nicholas’ church in Clifton Hill, was the subject of a 12-month internal investigation by the church’s independent commissioner, Peter O’Callaghan, QC, of the Melbourne Response, and the Archdiocese of Adelaide, where the alleged offences are said to have taken place in the mid 1980s.

Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart told Father Krizanac in June that he would be permanently stripped of all clerical duties, while parishioners were believed to have been informed at Mass on Sunday.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Melbourne confirmed the allegations had been referred to South Australian police in April 2013 – a month before Father Krizanac was placed on “administrative leave” by the church.

The alleged victim received a financial settlement from the church, but refused to assist police, who were unable to investigate the matter.

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Child abuse inquiry recommendations stalled

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 17, 2014

Jane Lee
Legal Affairs Reporter for The Age

There is a cloud over when all of the state inquiry’s recommendations for preventing child abuse will be legislated, three months before the Victorian election.

The state inquiry into the handling of child abuse made the recommendations in its Betrayal of Trust report, which was tabled last November. The Coalition has so far only implemented three of its 15 recommendations, creating offences for grooming, failure to protect children from abuse and failure to disclose abuse. Reforms for a fourth – ensuring religious ministers have working with children checks – are before Parliament.

Attorney-General Robert Clark told a forum hosted by victims’ support group Commission Of Inquiry Now on Friday that the government was working on laws and considering options for the other recommendations, which aim to make organisations more accountable for child abuse, and make it easier for victims to claim compensation.

Mr Clark would not say whether all would be implemented in the 12 sitting days before the November election: “We’re working through each…and when we’re in a position to do so we’ll bring [proposed laws] to the Parliament particularly in relation to the civil redress, limitation of actions and civil liability provisions.”

He would not say whether the government would hold an extra parliamentary sitting to ensure all the recommendations were implemented.

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Brady resignation “too late” for abuse survivor

IRELAND
The Journal

CLERICAL ABUSE SURVIVOR Brendan Boland says that the resignation of Sean Brady as Primate of All Ireland has come too late.

Speaking on RTÉ’s This Week programme, Boland said that Brady had been “rewarded” for covering up child sex abuse.

Boland disclosed that he had been abused by notorious paedophile Brendan Smyth to a priest in 1975. He has written a book, Sworn to Silence about the cover up that ensued.

He said that he has no desire to meet with Brady, but said that he wants Brady to read the book.

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Fr Joe Borg echoes claims of Church’s ‘leadership crisis’

MALTA
Malta Independent

Former Mġarr parish priest Emanuel Camilleri’s assertion – as reported in The Malta Independent – that the Catholic Church in Malta faces a “leadership crisis” has been echoed by priest and university lecturer Joe Borg.

In an opinion piece which appeared on today’s edition of The Sunday Times of Malta, Fr Borg argued that the leadership crisis faced by the Archdiocese of Malta was the elephant in the room which “all those I have talked to in the Church readily admit to in private to its existence, only to remain totally silent about it in public, or, worse still, deny its existence.”

Fr Camilleri, who had previously served as the parish priest of the St Mary parish in Birkirkara and of Msida, was only appointed parish priest of Mġarr last March.

However, his tenure was soon met with controversy as he sought to enforce a decree he had nothing to do with – it was issued by the Curia on 28 March – on the Via Sagra procession held in the locality.

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In Recent News (One Hand, Other Hand)…

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

In Recent News (One Hand, Other Hand): How Catholic Leaders Deal with Priests Guilty of Abusing Minors v. How Catholic Leaders Deal with Lay Employees Who Are Gay

In the news lately, there’s this: as this editorial in the Daily Gazette (Schenectady, NY) indicates, this past Wednesday, Father James Taylor, a Catholic priest in Niskayuna, pled guilty to having sexual contact with a 15-year-old girl. Taylor was arrested in April. His bishop, Edward Scharfenberger, placed him on administrative leave after the arrest, but has announced that the diocesan sexual misconduct review board will not make a final decision about Taylor’s continuing work as a priest until after the civil proceedings against him have finished.

Scharfenberger’s approach to the case prompts the Daily Gazette to ask,

[W]hy wait until civil legal proceedings have been completed before holding a hearing, to then determine whether Taylor should remain a priest?

As the editorial notes,

If you own a business and one of your employees is convicted of having sexual contact with a minor, the second that court case is over, that guy is fired. . . . If the bishop really wanted to send a message about zero-tolerance, he would use the outcome of the criminal court case as the final arbiter and kick this guy to the curb now.

And then there’s this, also in the news recently: in July, William Nifong, a Latin teacher at Northside College Prep School in Chicago, proposed to Colin Collette, a longtime music director at Holy Family Catholic church in Inverness, Illinois. Collette announced the engagement on Facebook.

And then he was fired. Immediately after his wedding plans appeared on Facebook. Lisa Black tells the story for the Chicago Tribune here and here.

A priest can be arrested after having had sexual contact with a 15-year-old girl. He can plead guilty to the charge in civil court.

But his bishop will still bend over backwards to assure that the priest receives every consideration as his clerical career is assessed.

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Shadow of Priest’s Abuse Over Author’s Grunt Sequel

NEW ZEALAND
Scoop

Sunday, 17 August 2014
Press Release: Mike Ledingham

Shadow of Priest’s Abuse Over Author’s Grunt Sequel

Wairarapa author Mike Ledingham tackles the difficult topic of abuse in the Catholic Church in Always a Grunt, the newly published sequel to his popular first book, Once a Grunt.

Like his first book, Always a Grunt is chocker with short stories laced with humour and sharp observations of human foibles and vanities.

However, two of the stories also delve deeper into sensitive areas of emotional turmoil as they recount the awful tragedy of an infant’s death, and the sickening and unjust dilemmas a youngster faces after falling victim to paedophile priest.

“The feedback after the first book came out was really encouraging,” says Mr Ledingham. “So I feel braver about branching out into some different areas with some of the new stories. It’s still in the same style, though. People who enjoyed the first book won’t be disappointed.”

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Church employee arrested for molesting children at Sunday Service

CALIFORNIA
New York Daily News

Friday, August 15, 2014

BY CAROL KURUVILLA

A Christian school employee is in police custody for allegedly molesting two children who were attending Sunday services.

Jonathan Macy, 31, was cuffed by California police on Wednesday morning after an investigation into the abuse, CBS reports.

The Lancaster man is an employee at the Grace Chapel Church, which is on the same campus as the Desert Christian School.

After allegations arose that he had sexual contact with a young girl on Aug. 5, a second victim stepped forward.

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Thomas Stitts and the 40-year Minnesota “memory loss”

MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on August 16, 2014

A couple of things struck me about the recently released clergy file of St. Paul and Minneapolis Archdiocese priest Thomas Stitts. I saved the best for last, so be sure to read to the end.

There is the 1985 “mystery letter.” The letter, which became known around the time of Stitts’ death, allegedly “named names” of scandalous priests in archdiocese. Rumors abounded that details in the letter were licentious and detailed. Priests all over the archdiocese begged Archbishop Roach to keep the document a secret.

Where did the letter go? According to the file, it mysteriously disappeared and was allegedly destroyed. Something tells me that copies are still floating around. Stitts knew he was dying and had nothing to lose by writing the letter. He also had nothing to lose by making lots of copies.

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Father Thomas Stitts may have confessed to sexually abusing boys before death

MINNESOTA
City Pages

By Jesse Marx
Fri., Aug. 15 2014

Father Thomas Stitts had been dead for mere days before his colleagues began digging up his spirit.

In a “STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL” memo dated November 22, 1985, then-Bishop Robert Carlson writes of Stitts’s possible exploits with boys. Rumors were circulating that, before the cancer got him, Stitts had come clean about his “moral activity” and named similarly abusive priests in a letter.

Carlson’s memo draws no definitive conclusion, but suggests that a choir director burned the confession to avoid scandal.

What remains of the priest’s secret personnel file — released Thursday as part of an upcoming lawsuit — is open to interpretation. Stitts is a more mysterious figure than the other priests who’ve been scrutinized over the last year. He seems to have been intensely private.

But it’s also clear from reading his file that he was deeply troubled, and that his superiors worried about him openly.

In 1979, for instance, then-Archbishop John Roach wrote, “I am very pleased to hear that the whole issue that you and I discussed has worked out,” meaning an allegation of abuse. “I would add only one thing,” Roach continued, “and that is that if there is something you feel you ought to be facing that you be sure to get some help.”

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Pell will appear before child abuse Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Source AAP 17 AUG 2014

One of the world’s first child abuse compensation schemes will be scrutinised when the child abuse royal commission sits in Melbourne this week.

The Melbourne Response, introduced in 1996, was the one of the Catholic Church’s first redress schemes for victims of pedophile priests.

Cardinal George Pell, who was Archbishop of Melbourne in the 1990s, will give evidence via video-link on Thursday from the Vatican about his role in setting up the scheme.

But first up will be Christine Foster, whose daughters were raped by a priest in Melbourne in the 1990s.

One daughter committed suicide while the other is in 24-hour care after being hit by a car.

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Cardinal Brady’s resignation ‘too little, too late’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

John Spain 

Published 17/08/2014

The author of the recently published book Sworn to Silence that made devastating revelations about Cardinal Sean Brady has dismissed his resignation letter as “too little too late”.

Brendan Boland was an 11-year-old altar boy in Dundalk when he was abused by Fr Brendan Smyth in the 1970s. Two years after the abuse began, he told another priest what was happening and a secret church inquiry was arranged.

He was questioned in isolation by a group of priests, including the then Fr John Brady. He was sworn to silence and the gardai were never informed, even though he had given the names of other boys who were at risk.

Yesterday, Brendan Boland made clear his dissatisfaction with the letter sent by Cardinal Brady.

He told the Sunday Independent: “This resignation is a long time coming. Cardinal Brady should have handed in his resignation back in 2010 (when a TV expose was broadcast).

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August 16, 2014

Advocates for abuse victims say priest names should be revealed

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Claire Taylor, Ken Stickney August 16, 2014

A survivors group for victims of pedophile priests has rejected as unsatisfactory Bishop Michael Jarrell’s decision to not identify the 15 accused Lafayette Diocese priests for whom the diocese has made financial payouts.

“Changing locations or jobs doesn’t cure a pedophile,” said Barbara Dorris, the outreach director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “So it’s incredibly disingenuous for Jarrell to imply that Lafayette police, parents and parishioners shouldn’t worry because some predator priests aren’t saying Mass now or have moved a few towns away.”

The bishop has turned away numerous requests to release the names of offenders. Late Thursday, he said of the 15, seven have died, five have moved away and none are involved in ministry.

In response to questions from The Daily Advertiser, the bishop conceded that the church is unable to account for the whereabouts of some offenders.

“Monitoring their activities is practically impossible,” he said.

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Email from Fight for GK leader: “Extremely Disappointed”

TEXAS
Watch Keep

M. Dustin Brimberry

to me

Amy,

Let me start off by saying that I 100% support the victims that have been molested (and I believe they probably were), that is not in question. I would never support a predator, I have the facts on my side and we need to catch the actual person that did this, the longer we wait, the more likely that person is to strike again because Greg Kelley is not some monster and he did not do this! Do your research, the police destroyed communication between themselves and CPS, which the judge partially blocked at trial. Greg is also a victim of a corrupt and evil DA, and police department. Do you really think a church would support Greg if he did this? NO. The pastor of the church was not even taking sides in the matter until he saw the real facts of the case with his own eyes. As soon as he was presented with the facts that were suppressed at trial, he quickly got on board because he saw the injustice of this whole thing.

I am extremely disappointed in your recent comments regarding the Greg Kelley case. I know that you probably published the letter from the Cedar Park Chief of Police to be used to try and smear the #FightforGK movement that is quickly gaining momentum, but that is about to backfire on you.

I love how enemies of the true and living God (though they pretend they are not), play right into his hands when they partner with satan. God loves to mock and ridicule satan, satan is always so arrogant that he always overplays his hand. That is exactly what our and all the others who clearly have no understanding of the GK case and have continued to falsely accuse an innocent young man. Your day along with all those others who have been on the side of injustice and corruption by the law enforcement (what a joke) of Williamson County have a day of reckoning coming very soon. God is about to rub all your faces in your lies because the truth is about to explode on the scene and it is Greg Kelley, his supporters and his family that are about to have the last laugh.

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ACTION COMICS #1, ARCH. ROBERT CARLSON…

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

. . .Poor Archbishop Robert Carlson can’t get a break. Even aging rocker and gun enthusiast Ted Nugent pillories Carlson in a recent blog post under the headline “Are You A Gullible Stooge or Real American?” Nugent compares the prelate to the IRS (“They both believe the American public is full of gullible idiots”) and calls Carlson “a fraud, liar, punk.” Nugent’s tirade ends with advice to parishioners: “Any Catholic who fails to step forward and condemn such evil is no better than Muslims who don’t speak out against the evil of the so-called honor killings. Silence is complicity and equally guilty as all hell”. . .

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The real reason for the Vatican’s problem with LCWR

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Eugene Cullen Kennedy | Aug. 15, 2014

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious spent the first day of its annual assembly in Nashville, Tenn., exploring the group’s “contemplative, collaborative process for making decisions,” which we know the Vatican has found troublesome.

This is, in fact, but an example, much as patients use in their search to explain to doctors what is bothering them, of the fundamental conflict between Roman authorities and America’s women religious.

The complaints made against these valiant women by Roman authorities are also illustrations of what bothers these officials about these women that they have not, cannot, or dare not express simply and directly.

That is why the indictments brought against American women religious appear to be a compilation of trivialities about problems, such as with the speakers they invite to their assemblies or those, theologian Sr. Elizabeth Johnson in particular, they honor for their work for the church.

These matters have been raised to an operatic level of complaint — or perhaps we might better say, “irritation” — by Cardinal Gerhard Müller, the head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, who insisted that the offenses were so grave that he needed to use “blunt” rather than “flowery language” in questioning whether the LCWR leadership was promoting programs “opposed to Christian Revelation.”

It might have been better — and more expressive of his deepest reactions — if Cardinal Müller had simply said, “We just don’t like the way you decide things.” And perhaps he could have added, “We never went along with you women thinking for yourselves, and I’m reasserting our male hierarchical control over you.”

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Former pastor of St. Catherine’s Parish, Cedar Grove, NJ, accused of sexual abuse

NEW JERSEY
Road to Recovery

Media Release

August 16, 2014

Rev. Robert Gibney allegedly sexually abused in Newark and Cedar Grove parishes

Newark Archdiocese needs to alert parishioners and the general public about allegations of sexual abuse against Fr. Robert Gibney

What: A demonstration and leafleting alerting the parishioners of St. Catherine’s Parish, Cedar Grove, NJ to the allegations of sexual abuse leveled against their former pastor, Rev. Robert Gibney.

When: Saturday, August 16, 2014 before and after the 5:00 and 6:00 PM Masses
Sunday, August 17, 2014 – after the 7:15 AM Mass; before and after the Masses
at 9:15 AM, 10:45 AM, and 12:15 PM

Where: On the public sidewalk outside St. Catherine Roman Catholic Church, 339 Pompton Avenue, Cedar Grove, NJ 07009

Who: Members of a victim/survivor advocacy group known as Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families.

Why: Two sexual abuse victims of Fr. Robert Gibney, former pastor of St. Catherine’s Parish, Cedar Grove, NJ, have come forward to claim that they were sexually abused by Fr. Robert Gibney. One of the victims alleges that he was sexually abused at Sacred Heart Parish in Newark in the 1960s when Fr. Robert Gibney was assigned to that parish. Another victim has alleged that he was abused when Fr. Robert Gibney was pastor of St. Catherine’s Parish. Fr. Robert Gibney was also stationed at St. Mary’s Parish, Dumont, NJ, and Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in Ridgewood, NJ. He was also a seminary dean and a military chaplain. Demonstrators will urge other sexual abuse victims of Fr. Robert Gibney to come forward to begin healing.

Contacts: Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., President, Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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Statement by Cardinal Seán Brady on offering his resignation as Archbishop of Armagh

IRELAND
Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference

Last month I offered my resignation to Pope Francis in accordance with the requirement of Canon Law. I did so in anticipation of my seventy-fifth birthday which I will celebrate tomorrow.

On 18 January 2013 Pope Benedict XVI acceded to my request for episcopal support and Archbishop Eamon Martin was appointed as Coadjutor Archbishop of Armagh. This means that as soon as Pope Francis accepts my resignation Archbishop Eamon will become Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland.

Archbishop Eamon has been warmly welcomed into the diocese. He has worked tirelessly in getting to know its priests, religious and lay faithful, as well as by becoming involved in every aspect of the life of the Church in Armagh and beyond.

I look forward to the day when my resignation will be accepted and when Archbishop Eamon will take over as Archbishop, a position for which, I believe, he is excellently prepared.

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Cardinal Brady is hoping Pope signs off on resignation

IRELAND
Herald

BY CORMAC MCQUINN – 16 AUGUST 2014

CARDINAL Sean Brady has said that his planned successor at the head of the Catholic Church in Ireland, co-adjudicator Archbishop of Armagh Eamon Martin, is “excellently prepared” to take on the role when his resignation is accepted by Pope Francis.

And the 75-year-old has said he is “looking forward to the day” that the Vatican approves his retirement.

Dr Brady has faced criticism over his role in the church’s handling of abuse claims against paedophile priest Fr Brendan Smyth.

Victims of clerical sexual abuse had called on Pope Francis to accept his resignation immediately.

This week it emerged that Dr Brady has written to the Pope requesting approval to retire.

In a statement issued last night, Dr Brady said he offered his resignation to Pope Francis last month in the “anticipation” of his 75th birthday, which he celebrates today.

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The church protected Father Vic Rubeo but Broken Rites exposed this cover-up

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 16 August 2014

Research by Broken Rites has revealed how the Catholic Church harboured this abusive priest, Father Victor Gabriel Rubeo, for three decades while he committed child-sex crimes in the Melbourne archdiocese. Broken Rites first exposed Rubeo in the 1990s, prompting some more of Rubeo’s victims to contact Broken Rites. In August 2014, Australia’s national Royal Commission on Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is receiving new evidence about more of Rubeo’s crimes, committed during the cover-up. Rubeo (pronounced “roo-BAY-oh”) was born in 1933 and was ordained as a priest in 1959; he died in 2011.

Rubeo’s victims included two boys (Tony and Will) in one of his earliest parishes (in Melbourne in the 1960s). In 1996 he pleaded guilty in court after these two victims finally spoke to police. On 28 October 2011, Rubeo appeared in court again, charged with 30 additional offences (in the 1960s) against the same two boys. He was ordered to re-appear on 16 December 2011 for a full hearing but he died a few hours before his next scheduled court appearance, aged 78.

The two boys in these court proceedings (Tony and Will) were twin brothers who were born about 1952. Their parents were Dutch working-class migrants. Their father had been badly affected by World War 2 and he had an alcohol problem. Their mother was missing her relatives in the Netherlands.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Francis X. Nawn, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Francis X. Nawn was ordained a Jesuit priest for the Wisconsin Province in June 1951. He was assigned to Jesuit high schools in Colorado and Wisconsin, then to Creighton University in Omaha NE for a year. In 1962 Nawn was transferred to Alaska, and was transcribed to the Oregon Province in 1973. He lived and worked in remote Alaskan villages until 1988, with the exception of a year’s sabbatical at Fordham University in New York. He died Oct. 1, 1992. In 2004 Nawn’s name first surfaced in lawsuits as having perpetrated child sexual abuse in Sheldon Point AK. The abuse was said to have occurred as early as 1963 and until at least 1977. By August 2005 nine men and a woman had come forward with allegations of sexual abuse by Nawn when they were children.

Ordained: June 14, 1951
Died: Oct. 1, 1992

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SNAP at the 2014 SBC annual meeting

UNITED STATES
Stop Baptist Predators

SNAP was at the Southern Baptist Convention’s annual meeting June 11 in Baltimore, handing out flyers and urging Baptists to get serious about dealing with clergy sex abuse and cover-ups.

The evangelical “good-old-boys” network is just as effective at covering up clergy sex crimes as the Catholic hierarchy, said Pam Palmer, a SNAP member who spoke with the media there.

This problem is not going away, and the sooner Baptists start responsibly addressing it, the safer kids in Baptist churches will be.

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Royal Commission proposal on victim compensation to be handed down next year

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

16 AUG 2014

The national inquiry into child sexual abuse in institutions plans to make final recommendations on compensation for victims by June of next year.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in its interim report published two months ago said it would need another $104 million and a two-year extension on its December 2015 deadline to produce its final report.

It promised, however, to make earlier recommendations on redress and civil litigation for thousands of victims of abuse, many of whom are elderly.

On Friday, the royal commission’s chief executive, Philip Reed, said June 30, 2015 was the target date for those recommendations.

“In order to achieve this shortened time frame, we are adopting an intensive consultation process involving both broad public consultation and targeted private consultation,” he said.

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Truth About FightforGK

TEXAS
Truth About FightforGK

Friday, August 15, 2014

I have stood just slightly to the side of the Fight for GK movement. Most in the movement would view me as part of the movement although I have not actually actively participated. I simply had the chance to be close. I know many, but not all, of the people directly involved in the movement. I watched the lead up to the trial and the trial itself (although I dared not to be in the actual courtroom). #PrayforGK on its face was noble if you also #PrayforTheVictims. I have no problem with people praying for someone even if that person has committed a crime. In fact, that original hashtag and slogan was chosen to draw in people who were not sure of guilt or innocence. However, the effect of the verdict and the switch to #FightforGK drew me in to watch the psychology of how a large group attempts to deal with this event.

#FightforGK will try to figure out who the “mole” is. I will be careful and not tell every detail that I am aware of, because there are things that I have overheard or been told directly that could tip them off to my identity.

My purpose is not to cause harm to anyone. I truly do feel terrible for almost everyone involved.

My purposes are:
1. Speak out to do a small part in helping to prevent child abuse in the future.
2. Stand for and uphold the Rule of Law that hold very dearly.

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Jarrell: Some pedophile priests beyond diocese’s reach

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Ken Stickney and Claire Taylor, kstickney@theadvertiser.com, cxtaylor@theadvertiser.com
August 15, 2014

Lafayette Bishop Michael Jarrell confirmed today that at least some of the 15 diocesan priests who were credibly accused in child molestation incidents that led to diocesan payout settlements are beyond the point where the diocese knows what they are doing.

Seven of the 15 have died, the bishop said. Of the remaining eight, none are involved in ministry and five have moved away, he said. But in some cases, the bishop concedes, “Monitoring their activities is practically impossible.”

The bishop’s disclosures and comments came in response to a series of written questions submitted to Jarrell by The Daily Advertiser through the Rev. Richard Greene, media liaison for the diocese.

“When these men move out of the diocese, we sometimes know where they are moving. If so, we inform that Diocese,” the bishop said in one written response to a question. The bishop also said that when prospective employers seek information about the former priests, “We respond truthfully.”

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Johnson to LCWR: Sisters ahead of hierarchy in living Vatican II renewal

TENNESSEE
National Catholic Reporter

Dan Stockman | Aug. 15, 2014

NASHVILLE, TENN. The Vatican and women religious are caught up in a tension with historical, sociological and ecclesiastical roots, but a solution could be found, Sr. Elizabeth Johnson said.

The Fordham University theologian praised the sisters for their commitment to “meaningful, honest dialogue” and urged them to stay the course.

Johnson was honored Friday with the Outstanding Leadership Award by the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the largest group of women religious leaders in the nation, representing about 80 percent of the 51,600 sisters in the United States.

Both Johnson and LCWR have been criticized by the church, and Johnson told the nearly 800 sisters gathered here for LCWR’s annual assembly that the criticisms of her writing and of LCWR are intertwined.

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Droppings from the Catholic Birdcage..

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Droppings from the Catholic Birdcage: “How Could a Catholic Priest with Such a History End Up As Second in Command of a Diocese—in 2014?”

At Commonweal, Grant Gallicho examines the curious case of Father Carlos Urrutigoity, who was removed by the Vatican in July from his position as vicar general in the diocese of Ciudad del Este in Paraguay. In defending Urrutigoity and the decision of Ciudad del Este bishop Rogelio Livieres to make him vicar general of the diocese despite repeated (and seemingly credible) allegations that he had sexually abused minors and seminarians, diocesan officials state that Urrutigoity came to Ciudad del Este with the recommendation of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI.

Gallicho writes:

The priest’s rise to prominence tracks closely with the church’s growing awareness of the gravity of clerical sexual abuse. Accusations of misconduct have followed him from Argentina to Pennsylvania. That’s what makes his reappearance in Ciudad del Este—where the bishop had him helping with seminary formation before promoting him to vicar general—so difficult to understand. How could a Catholic priest with such a history end up as second in command of a diocese—in 2014?

How, indeed?

As Joe Navarro notes in this Psychology Today article, predators appear to be attracted to religious institutions for all kinds of reasons: because the aggregation of congregants at worship services and other religious events creates a pool of potential victims for the predator to prey on; because of the prestige afforded religious leaders; because the club mentality of the leadership structure of many religious organizations affords protection and secrecy for predators; because the predator can exploit claims that he represents God to layfolks and that critical questions about his behavior represent an attack on divine authority; because of the money and other material resources provided to the ordained, etc.

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Second victim claims abuse by Alvarado pastor

TEXAS
Cleburne Times-Review

August 15, 2014

According to a Fort Worth newspaper, another victim has come forward claiming Dan Haby Jr., pastor of Cowboy Way Church in Alvarado, sexually abused him as a teen.

Haby, 51, is charged on two counts of indecency with a child and remains free on bond after his July 25 arrest on allegations that he sexually abused a teen he mentored while he was a pastor of the Stockyards Community Church in Fort Worth.

Haby used to live in Fort Worth and the alleged abuse began in 2000, when the first victim was 15, and occurred in his home on Creston Avenue. The victim contacted police in June and investigators obtained two arrest warrants for indecency with a child by sexual contact.

According to the article, the second alleged victim, 25, contacted Fort Worth police detective C.W. Daniels on July 31 after news of Haby’s arrest.

A Fort Worth police report filed Thursday indicates the alleged abused also occurred in Haby’s home on Creston Avenue in Fort Worth.

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New Canaan, woman who had sexual relationship with minor, avoids jail time

CONNECTICUT
The Hour

Fri Aug 15, 2014.
By STEVE KOBAK
Hour Staff Writer

NORWALK — A former New Canaan Sunday school teacher avoided jail but must register as a sex offender after pleading guilty to having a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old male Friday at Norwalk Superior Court.

Morgan Frawley, 26, received a 10-year suspended prison sentence and 10 years of probation after pleading guilty to risk of injury of a minor. Should she violate her probation, she would be subject to serve all or a portion of her 10-year suspended sentence. She must also register as a sex offender for 10 years.

Frawley was ordered to stay away from persons under the age of 16 nor can she have any contact with the victim or his family. She must also undergo mental health treatment.

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Mark Driscoll, Spiritual Abuse and Cultish Ministries

UNITED STATES
Charisma News

JENNIFER LECLAIRE

Spiritual abuse. I’ve endured it, so I know what it looks like.

As I’ve said in the past, spiritual abuse, cultish churches and controlling ministries are less often exposed than pastors who coerce teenaged boys and unsuspecting church secretaries to have sexual relations.

Mark Driscoll may pour out crude sermons about oral sex and sex toys in sermons—he’s long been ultra-controversial—but the spiritual abuse allegations are most troubling. Those allegations emerged earlier this month—before the Acts 29 network he co-founded disassociated itself with him and the church, and before LifeWay pulled his books off the shelves.

What Is Spiritual Abuse?

I had never heard the words “spiritual abuse” until I escaped a controlling ministry where the subtle practice ran rampant. Someone close to me who had observed the behavior in the church I attended recommended a book called The Subtle Power of Spiritual Abuse.

Jeff VanVonderen, co-author of the classic book, explains spiritual abuse this way: “Spiritual abuse occurs when someone in a position of spiritual authority … misuses that authority placing themselves over God’s people to control, coerce or manipulate them for seemingly godly purposes which are really their own.”

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Ex-Norwalk pastor, suspected of molesting 20 women…

CALIFORNIA
Press-Telegram

Ex-Norwalk pastor, suspected of molesting 20 women, sentenced to 6 years in sexual-penetration case

By Beatriz Valenzuela, Press-Telegram
POSTED: 08/15/14

A former Norwalk pastor was sentenced to six years in state prison this week after he pleaded no contest to sexually assaulting a congregant.

Jorge Castro, 55, who was a pastor at Las Buenas Nuevas Church in Norwalk, pleaded no contest to a felony count of sexual penetration by foreign object and was also ordered to register as a sex offender for life.

In April of 2010, one of the church’s female congregants went to Castro for spiritual counseling, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office. While praying for the woman, he sexually assaulted her. Castro, however, is suspected of molesting as many as 20 women, most of whom were Spanish-speaking undocumented immigrants.

Castro was arrested in September after reports of the abuse. He was charged with six felony counts in connection with the alleged sexual assaults of four women between ages 18 and 39.

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Douglas County ex-pastor to undergo psychosexual evaluation

GEORGIA
WSB

[with video]

By Carl Willis
DOUGLAS COUNTY, Ga. — A former pastor, who has been in the headlines before, is now accused of touching an employee against her will.

Bill Wininger, 62, was arrested on four counts of simple battery Thursday.

The Solicitor-General’s Office announced Friday that they filed a formal accusation of four counts of simple battery. They say Wininger made unwanted physical contact with a teacher at the King’s Way Christian School.

Prosecutors say sexual conduct by Wininger was also directed toward other employees at the school.

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Cliff Richard case: police receive new information

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Vikram Dodd
The Guardian, Friday 15 August 2014

Police investigating a claim of sexual abuse by Sir Cliff Richard on Friday said new people had come forward with information after media coverage of a raid by detectives on the home of the entertainer.

Richard’s property in Sunningdale, Berkshire, was searched on Thursday by detectives investigating a single claim of the sexual abuse of a boy aged under 16 at an evangelical rally held by Billy Graham in Sheffield in 1985 at which the singer performed.

The search is mired in controversy because the BBC had journalists, who apparently knew the raid was going to take place, waiting for the police outside.

South Yorkshire police on Friday said they had worked with the BBC ahead of the raid, but denied being the source of the leak. …

Police raided Richard’s home over allegations of a sexual assault at a rally held by the US evangelical preacher Billy Graham nearly 30 years ago.

Richard said on Thursday that he had been aware of rumours circulating on the internet for some time, but that the allegation was “completely false”. The police raid, he added, was “without notice, except, it would appear, to the press”.

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KC diocese must pay $1.1M in abuse deal breach

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Kansas City Business Journal

Staff
Kansas City Business Journal

The Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph must pay a $1.1 million breach-of-contract award for violating a settlement with victims of priest sexual abuse as an arbitrator ordered, the Jefferson City News Tribune reports.

Jackson County Circuit Court Judge Bryan Round upheld the arbitrator’s finding that the diocese failed to abide by “the terms of the non-monetary commitments” in the 2008 settlement, the report says.

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Sister Elizabeth Johnson: The waste of time on this investigation is unconscionable

TENNESSEE
Religion News Service

Heidi Hall | August 16, 2014

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (RNS) A nun who drew U.S. Catholic bishops’ ire with what they consider radical feminist writings fired back Friday (Aug. 15), saying their investigation of women’s orders is wasteful when financial mismanagement and sexual abuses are being covered up.

Sister Elizabeth Johnson, a theology professor at Fordham University, accepted the Leadership Conference of Women Religious’ top award and then lambasted bishops for criticism of her book “Quest for the Living God,” saying it appears they’ve never read it.

“To this day, no one, not myself or the theological community, the media or the general public knows what doctrinal issue is at stake,” she told the Nashville assembly of about about 900 women representing 80 percent of the nation’s nuns.

In her 20-minute acceptance speech, Johnson suggested the conference’s support of her work prompted the investigation by the church’s top enforcer of orthodoxy, the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith.

Johnson’s book includes chapters on black and feminist theology and interfaith engagement. She said book sales skyrocketed after the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops criticized it.

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