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.

October 9, 2014

Father Paul Morton suspended amid sex abuse claims

SCOTLAND
BBC News

A Roman Catholic priest based in South Lanarkshire has been suspended from his duties while police investigate allegations of historical sex abuse.

A church spokesman said Father Paul Morton would not be living at St Bride’s parish in Cambuslang or undertaking any public ministry.

Mass will be said by another priest.

Police Scotland said officers had begun an investigation after receiving a complaint about Father Morton. Inquiries are at an early stage.

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

Niskayuna priest fined, removed from ministry for sexual contact with teen

NEW YORK
Miskayuna

By NED CAMPBELL
Gazette Reporter

CLIFTON PARK — A Niskayuna priest who pleaded guilty in August to having sexual contact with a 15-year-old girl was sentenced to pay a $1,000 fine and $255 in surcharges Wednesday in Clifton Park Town Court.

The Rev. James Michael Taylor, 31, who had been suspended as a priest by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany when he was arrested, was removed from the ministry Wednesday by Bishop Edward Scharfenberger, according to diocese spokesman Ken Goldfarb. This means he may no longer perform any priestly duties.

Taylor, who was convicted of one misdemeanor count of endangering the welfare of a child, will receive no jail time or probation for the charge, which is punishable by up to a year in jail.

Town Justice James Hughes also placed a five-year order of protection for the victim, effective immediately, barring Taylor from having any contact with the girl with whom he was accused of having sexual contact while serving as a youth minister at Corpus Christi Church in Clifton Park.

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.

“SEX PEST” RABBI WORRIES AMSTERDAM RESIDENTS

NETHERLANDS
NL Times

Posted on Oct 9, 2014 by Janene Van Jaarsveldt

Residents of Buitenveldert are not happy that the controversial Rabbi Eliezer Berland has settled down in their neighborhood.

Residents worry about their safety because the rabbi is suspected in Israel of sexual offenses, Het Parool reports. Others complain about the cars with followers driving up and down and the supporters hanging around in front of the door. The men won’t talk to women, which leads to uncomfortable situations. One neighbor says the fling trash around.

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.

Synod in Rome: Pope Francis and the antinomians

UNITED STATES
GlobalPost

Jason Berry

In 2002, on a sunny fall day in Rome, I asked a canon lawyer why the Vatican derailed a 1989 request by American bishops for a free hand to defrock sex abusers. Only the pope held that power — if bishops had more flexibility to dismiss abusers it might have preempted scandals to come.

The priest told me that US diocesan tribunals “violated grandly – terribly – the annulments of marriage.” What, I asked, did marriage annulments have to do with pedophilia?

“Laxity on annulments,” he fumed, showed an “antinomian mentality” – against moral law. Too many annulments let people freely remarry, weakening church law. Thus, Rome would give no ground on sex abusers, the logic went.

An earthquake has happened since then. Pope Benedict improved the procedure for laicizing sex abusers. But the Vatican moved so slowly, failing to confront complicit bishops, that the scandals took a huge toll on church moral authority – the issue that drew the ire of that canon lawyer.

Many divorced Catholics now remarry without annulments. No studies pinpoint how many take communion despite church prohibition but “antinomian” dynamics are a flashpoint issue at the synod, or international bishops’ gathering, that opened Sunday at the Vatican.

Most synods are boring. This one, on family issues, has at least two potent story lines: Pope Francis’s agenda of “radical mercy” for a changing church, and his shakeup of old-guard figures in the Roman Curia.

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.

Grand Blanc priest will remain on leave despite being cleared of improperly touching children

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Gary Ridley | gridley@mlive.com
on October 09, 2014

GRAND BLANC, MI — A Grand Blanc priest will remain on administrative leave despite recently finding out he will not face charges over accusations that he inappropriately touched two children.

Diocese of Lansing Bishop Earl Boyea announced Tuesday, Oct. 7, that the Rev. Ken Coughlin of Holy Family Parish will remain on leave after Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton announced he would not file charges against Coughlin over claims he touched the hand and legs of two students earlier this year at Holy Family Catholic School in Grand Blanc.

Boyea claimed that the leave stems from Coughlin’s allegedly inappropriate relationship with adult women.

“… Father Coughlin has been undergoing an assessment and treatment to address his embrace of celibacy and its proper expression,” Boyea said in his statement. “The treatment is ongoing and will help me decide on the best course for the future. In the meantime, Father Coughlin will continue to be on temporary administrative leave.”

Coughlin’s attorney, Frank J. Manley, said Coughlin is an outstanding priest who has dedicated his life to the church.

“Unfortunately, the reality is that a term like celibacy when involving the church includes an allegedly improper thought to a peck on the cheek,” Manley said.

However, Manley said he understand the church’s desire to ensure everyone in the parish that Coughlin is not engaged intentionally in improper acts.

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.

Rome–Victims hope Francis doesn’t win Nobel Prize

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 9

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 )

Some will be offended by our saying this, but we hope the esteemed Nobel committee does not award the Nobel Peace Prize to Pope Francis.

[Huffington Post]

While he’s made strides in improving church governance and finances and speaks often about the poor, that doesn’t merit a prize of this stature. And he’s done almost nothing to protect kids, expose predators, punish enablers, and deter future child sex crimes and cover ups. And it would be very ironic were the Pope to win the Nobel Peace Prize in the same year two United Nations panels harshly criticized his institution for continuing cover ups of sexual violence by clergy. What other “head of state” who has been cited for non-compliance with United Nations treaties on torture and children’s rights is up for consideration?

Francis made a few well-orchestrated “feel good” gestures about the church’s on-going abuse and cover up crisis. Like his predecessors, he’s belatedly taken timid action against a high profile child molesting cleric. (Francis has disciplined Archbishop Josef Wesolowski, much like Benedict disciplined Fr. Maciel.)

Like his predecessors, he’s belatedly taken timid and vague action against a controversial bishop.

Like his predecessors, he has apologized for abuse and met with victims. But like his predecessors, he’s also done very little, if anything to make a single child safer, preferring instead to use words rather than deeds and symbolism rather than substance.

Unlike his predecessors, he’s slowly setting up an abuse commission, but to us, that seems like a paltry public relations move rather than a meaningful reform move. He needs no panel to guide him. He knows that every Catholic official who commits or conceals child sex crimes should be turned over to law enforcement and be disciplined harshly by the Vatican. But he refuses to take decisive action that will really make a difference, preferring instead soothing words that won’t really make a difference.

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.

MN–Rochester priest should be suspended

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 9

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

A Rochester Catholic priest who hid clergy child sex crimes in Winona should be suspended.

Newly-released church records about pedophile priests in Winona show that Msgr. Gerald Mahon “dealt with cases of alleged abuse” but apparently did not ever contact law enforcement or issue public warnings to police, prosecutors, parents or parishioners about credibly accused child molesting clerics.

Msgr. Mahon claims he “always took claims of sexual assault very seriously.” Sadly, his words are meaningless. His actions are what matter. And his actions, according to his church’s own records, contract his claims.

For a decade in the 1990s, Msgr. Mahon

—was in the Winona diocese’s “inner circle” as vicar general, reporting directly to his bishop,
—knew child sex abuse was illegal,
—knew about or suspected child sex crimes and/or misdeeds by several colleagues and underlings (Fr. Joseph Cashman and Fr. Roger Taylor), yet
—apparently never once called the police or warned parishioners about known or suspected child sex crimes.

These are not allegations. These are facts, drawn straight from the church’s own files, made public only because brave clergy sex abuse victims are finding the strength to file lawsuits and force these long-overdue disclosures.

What else does Winona Bishop John Quinn need to know about Msgr. Mahon than this – that he repeatedly, through actions and inactions, stayed silent, concealed predators and endangered kids?

There are now 16 publicly accused Winona priests who have been publicly accused of molesting children. We can’t help but wonder how many of them Msgr. Mahon shielded during his ten years in the Winona diocese’s inner circle. We can’t help but wonder if any of them might now be in prison if only Msgr. Mahon honored his civic and moral duty and called 911. We can’t help but wonder how many innocent, trusting boys and girls might have been spared devastating pain if only Msgr. Mahon put their safety ahead of the reputations and careers and convenience of himself and his Catholic colleagues and supervisors?

We applaud the courageous Winona area families that reported abuse and helped to make others safer. But we are sad that Msgr. Mahon evidently did so little to help them stop predator priests – either years ago as vicar general or in recent years as a priest?

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

NY–Victims blast judge over sentence for predatory priest

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 9

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

We are shocked that a New York judge is giving a dreadfully light sentence to a Catholic priest who pled guilty of child sex crimes. Kids are safest when child molesters are imprisoned. It’s not about punishment, it’s about prevention.

[Saratogian]

[WNYT]

Yesterday, Judge James Hughes gave a fine and an order of protection to Fr. James Michael Taylor who pled guilty in August to one count of endangering the welfare of a minor, a misdemeanor.

According to WNYT TV, “the six-month-long relationship included inappropriate physical contact, along with phone calls, texts and photos.”

We applaud police and prosecutors for successfully pursuing this predator. (We disagree, however, with the prosecutor who said Fr. Taylor “failed.” His actions were deliberate. So he did not fail. He repeatedly chose to act in illegal, hurtful and inappropriate ways with a vulnerable teenaged girl.) Above all, however, we applaud the courageous family that cooperated with them to make others safer. To us, this sentence feels like a betrayal to all of them.

We’re glad Fr. Taylor must stay away from this family but we worry that he’ll hurt other families. He belongs in a remote, secure, independent treatment center, far away from parents and kids who have come to trust him.

We cannot say this often or loudly enough: this brave teen and her family heroes for exposing wrongdoing and protecting others. Though they have a long, hard road ahead, we are confident that this outcome will help them in their recovery.

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.

VA–Minister guilty of abuse should be locked up for long time

VIRGINIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 9

Statement by Becky Ianni, Virginia director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 703 801 6044, SNAPvirgania@cox.net )

We urge a Virginia judge to give the maximum sentence to a minister who was just found guilty of child sex crimes. Kids are safest when child molesters are imprisoned. It’s not about punishment, it’s about prevention. It’s not about vengeance, it’s about prudence.

[Roanoke Times]

[The News-Gazette]

Yesterday, a jury found Rev. Larry McKinley Clark of Pentecostal Outreach Church of Buena Vista guilty on all counts. We applaud police and prosecutors for successfully pursuing this predator. Above all, however, we applaud the courageous family that cooperated with them to make others safer.

We cannot say this often or loudly enough: this brave teen and his family heroes for exposing wrongdoing and protecting others. Though they have a long, hard road ahead, we are confident that this outcome will help them in their recovery.

We hope and believe this outcome will prod others who have been hurt by ministers, priests, nuns, deacons, seminarians and other church employees to get help, come forward, expose wrongdoers and protect 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.

Roman Catholic priest suspended amid historical sex abuse allegations

SCOTLAND
STV

A Roman Catholic priest has been suspended amid allegations of historical sex abuse.

Father Paul Morton, 54, has been removed from his duties at St Bride’s RC Church in Cambuslang, South Lanarkshire.

He will remain on administrative leave and will not live in the parish house as a police investigation continues.

The details of the allegation is not known but Police Scotland confirmed they had received a report in relation to sex abuse allegations and are investigating.

A police spokeswoman said: “We can confirm we have received a report in connection with historical sexual abuse allegations and the matter is being investigated.”

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

Priest accused of pedophilia goes to PNG hospital, stalls deportation to Australia

AUSTRALIA/NEW GUINEA
The Age

[with video]

October 9, 2014

Rory Callinan
Investigative journalist

The Papua New Guinea-based Catholic priest ordered by the church to return to Australia after Fairfax Media revealed his alleged involvement in Australian child abuse cases appears to have stalled his departure by going into hospital.

The Catholic Church paid more than $100,000 to victims who alleged abuse by Father Roger Mount when he was a brother with the Catholic St John of God Order running children’s homes in NSW and Victoria in the 1960s and 1970s.

He moved to Papua New Guinea in the 1980s and became a Catholic priest – most recently in the Sogeri Parish about 45km north-east of Port Moresby – despite the allegations of child abuse being reported to the Catholic Church in Australia.

This week the Herald revealed that despite the abuse allegations, Mount was still operating as the priest in the remote parish and had been ignoring instructions to leave for more than two years and was living in the country illegally.

The Port Moresby Dioceses, which oversees Sogeri Parish, issued a statement saying Mount was to be sent back to Australia.

Port Moresby Diocese vicar-general Father Ben Fleming said Mount was to be collected on Thursday and taken to transit accommodation in Port Moresby where his return to Australia would be undertaken.

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.

TOM … AS IN MORGAN: Going by their own rules

UNITED STATES
Finger Lakes Times

By TOM MORGAN

Forgive me for my thickness, please, but there are items in the news a lot that I don’t understand.

One is how various institutions act as if they have their own laws. For instance, we know officials in the Roman Catholic Church ignored the law in various countries. They knew some priests were violating the laws, yet they chose to deal with the priests instead of calling in police. They disciplined some; they shielded others.

Point is that they acted as if they had their own laws, as if their churches were another country. They apparently believed the laws that applied to the rest of us did not apply to members of their clergy. They knew about child molesting and did not report it. Does this mean priests could have murdered kids and not been reported by fellow clergy? Simply because officials felt the church had better ways of dealing with the crimes?

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.

SD– Victims urge church officials to help with new abuse case

SOUTH DAKOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, 10/8

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

A former Lutheran minister in South Dakota is facing criminal charges of molesting a girl. Now, Lutheran officials have a duty to help police and prosecutors with this case and aggressively seek out anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes by the clergyman.

We applaud this brave girl and her family for cooperating with police and prosecutors. And we applaud law enforcement officials for investigating and pursuing this case. But church members and staff have an obligation to help too, by using pulpit announcements, bulletins, mailings and websites to reach out to anyone who might have information or suspicions about Tony Haglund that could be helpful to law enforcement.

[Keloland]

All too often, church officials proclaim their opposition to child sex abuse but act helpless when a cleric is accused of hurting kids. Church officials must be proactive and responsible and try to track down former congregants who may have been assaulted by alleged child molesting clerics.

We urge anyone in the Canton area – whether victim, witness or whistleblower – to speak up now and safeguard innocent kids and vulnerable adults by exposing wrongdoers. We especially call on current and former church employees to act responsibly and share what they know or suspect about Catholic clerics who commit or conceal child sex crimes with the police, prosecutors, parishioners and the public right away.

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.

No jail for priest who had inappropriate relationship with teen

NEW YORK
WNYT

A local priest who pleaded guilty to inappropriate contact with a 15-year-old girl has avoided jail time.

The Rev. James Michael Taylor was ordered Wednesday to pay a $1,000 fine. He’s also been ordered not to have any contact with the girl for five years.

Taylor met the 15-year-old girl while he was a youth minister at Corpus Christi Church on Route 9 in Round Lake. The six-month-long relationship included inappropriate physical contact, along with phone calls, texts and photos.

At the time of his arrest this past April, Taylor was a priest at St. Kateri Tekakwitha Parish in Schenectady.

Taylor agreed to a plea deal last August in which he admitted to a charge endangering the welfare of a child. The plea deal allowed him to avoid jail time.

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

Royal Commission to hold public hearing into the Hutchins School, Hobart

AUSTRALIA
Roy Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

The Royal Commission will hold a public hearing at the Hobart Federal Court from 19 November 2014 at 10:00am AEST.

The public hearing will inquire into the responses by the Hutchins School and the Anglican Diocese of Tasmania to allegations of child sexual abuse at the School.

The scope and purpose of the public hearing is to inquire into:

1. The Hutchins School’s response to allegations of child sexual abuse made against David Ralph Lawrence and Lyndon Alfred Hickman.

2. The role of the Anglican Diocese of Tasmania in respect of the Hutchins School’s response to allegations of child sexual abuse made against David Ralph Lawrence and Lyndon Alfred Hickman.

3. Any related matters.

Any person or institution who believes that they have a direct and substantial interest in the scope and purpose of the public hearing is invited to lodge a written application for leave to appear at the public hearing by 29 October 2014. See the application for leave to appear.

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.

Ex-Christian Brother pleads guilty to 55 historical Victorian sex offences

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN OCTOBER 09, 2014

A FORMER Christian Brother is behind bars after pleading guilty to sexual assaults spanning two decades on boys in his care.

Edward “Ted” Bales, of Thomastown, pleaded guilty to 55 charges of sexual assault at the Melbourne Magistrates Court today and was immediately taken into custody.

The offending related to horrific crimes against children in the 1970s and 1980s while stationed with the Christian Brothers at Ballarat and Warnambool.

Bales indecently assaulted males in Ballarat, Forest Hill and Warrnambool between 1970 and 1975 and in Lovely Banks, East Melbourne and Lower Templestowe between 1980 and 1984.

Bales, who changed his name from Edward Dowlan after serving a previous jail term for similar offending, was allegedly moved between parishes by his superiors after complaints were made about him.

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.

Convicted ex-clergy abuser guilty again

AUSTRALIA
SBS

A convicted pedophile who changed his name to avoid publicity has admitted to another 55 offences committed while he was a Christian brother teaching in Victorian schools.

Ted Bales, 64, was taken into custody on Thursday after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting boys over a 16-year period in the 1970s and 1980s.

Bales, now a defrocked layman living in Thomastown, was formerly known as Edward Vernon Dowlan.

The name ‘Dowlan’ has frequently appeared alongside some of Australia’s most notorious clergy pedophiles, including Robert Charles Best and Gerald Francis Ridsdale.

A court hearing in April was told Bales changed his identity to avoid publicity because his name came up whenever the media reported on crimes involving the Christian Brothers.

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

Former Catholic school teacher arrigned on abuse charges

KENTUCKY
WLKY

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —Dale Anderson was in court Wednesday morning, accused of abusing a student between the ages of 11 and 14 sometime between 1981 and 1993. He was a teacher at Saint Raphael School at the time.

During his arraignment, the judge told Anderson not to have any contact with his accuser, or unsupervised contact with minors.

The indictment charges Anderson with two counts of sexual abuse, one count of sodomy and two counts of attempted sodomy.

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.

Justice fears for child sex abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
Yahoo! News

AAP

KARLIS SALNA
October 9, 2014

The ability of the courts to secure justice for child sexual abuse victims may be diminishing, despite decades of law reform, the head of a royal commission says.

Justice Peter McClellan gave the warning as data covering almost 20 years showed a massive fall in the number of child sexual abuse cases that make it to court.

An analysis of police and court data from NSW suggests a steady increase in the number of incidents of child sexual assault offences reported between 1995 and 2013, including a spike following the two-year Wood Royal Commission which concluded in 1997.

But for the same period, the proportion of child sexual assaults reported to police where charges were laid declined dramatically, from around 60 per cent in 1995, to around 15 per cent in 2013.

The figures have raised concerns the trend is being replicated across other jurisdictions.

Speaking on Thursday at the International Criminal Law Congress in Melbourne, Justice McClellan said that over the past three decades there had been more than 300 inquiries which had touched upon or been concerned with the sexual abuse of children.

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

Rochester priest defends actions as vicar general

MINNESOTA
Post-Bulletin

Kay Fate, kfate@postbulletin.com

A Rochester priest who once held a top leadership role in the Diocese of Winona is mentioned several times in the files released Tuesday describing abuse allegations against priests.

Rev. Monsignor Gerald Mahon, pastor at the Church of St. John the Evangelist, served as vicar general from 1987 to 1997, he said Tuesday, working under then-Bishop John Vlazny.

As vicar general, he dealt with cases of alleged abuse, he said.

“I always took claims of sexual assault very seriously,” Mahon said in an interview Tuesday, “and confronted priests with Bishop Vlazny. I took it very seriously, any victim I ever visited with, any reports of sexual abuse, and I took seriously confronting priests.”

Among those priests was Joseph Cashman, whose file indicates he is now married to a man and living in Texas.

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.

Ex-pastor of Buena Vista church found guilty of molesting teenager

VIRGINIA
Roanoke Times

By Luanne Rife luanne.rife@roanoke.com 981-3209

LEXINGTON — A Rockbridge County jury on Wednesday found a former Buena Vista preacher molested a teenage parishioner during the three years he attended the Pentecostal Outreach Church, and recommended the ex-pastor be sentenced to serve 35 years in prison.

“I will continue to say I’m not guilty, your honor,” Larry McKinley Clark told Rockbridge County Circuit Court Judge Michael Irvine before the judge agreed with the jury’s verdict and set sentencing for Jan. 5.

Defense attorney Kelly Cutler said Clark will appeal. The jury deliberated for less than an hour before returning guilty verdicts on all counts of indecent assault and having carnal knowledge of a minor.

“This is wonderful,” said prosecutor Christopher Billias. “It was such a fast deliberation. Usually it doesn’t go in our favor when it is so quick.”

The case hinged mostly on the testimony of the now 16-year-old boy who was reluctant to talk about the assaults and gave inconsistent answers under cross-examination. He strained to provide answers, and though allowed to testify via closed circuit television, he appeared distressed and confused.

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

Former youth minister sentenced for endangering welfare of child

NEW YORK
Saratogian

By Glenn Griffith, The Saratogian
POSTED: 10/08/14

CLIFTON PARK >> A former youth minister at Corpus Christi Church was given a $1,000 fine and had a five-year order of protection imposed on him in an appearance Wednesday before Town Justice James Hughes in Clifton Park Town Court.

The Wednesday sentencing was the result of Rev. James Michael Taylor’s guilty plea in August to one count of endangering the welfare of a minor, a misdemeanor.

In addition to the fine and the order of protection, he was assessed a $205 court surcharge and required to give a DNA sample.

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.

Clark Found Guilty

VIRGINIA
The News-Gazette

Written by Roberta Anderson

It took a jury of six men and six women less than 30 minutes to find Larry Clark, former pastor of the Pentecostal Outreach Church in Buena Vista, guilty of three charges of taking indecent liberties with and two charges of carnal knowledge of a minor in Rockbridge County Circuit Court.

The verdict came following two days of testimony from witnesses including the victim of the sexual assault as well as supporters of Clark from his former church.

The jurors also quickly decided on sentencing recommendations. They recommended that Clark receive five years in prison and a $2,500 fine for each count of taking indecent liberties with a child and 10 years in prison and a $50,000 fine on each count of carnal knowledge. Clark’s attorneys requested a presentencing report, and Judge Michael Irvine set Jan. 5, 2015 as the sentencing date.

During his summation for the jury, assistant Commonwealth’s Attorney Christopher Billias questioned why the victim would make up the accusations against the pastor of the church that had previously been a focal point in the child’s life. “Why would he put himself through this?” Billias asked.

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 inquiry: Hillsong leader Brian Houston says victim can decide about going to pol

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY NONEE WALSH
October 9, 2014

Hillsong Church leader Brian Houston has told an inquiry he did not report child sexual abuse claims against his father to police because the victim was over 18 when he came forward.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is examining the handling of allegations against William Francis Houston, better known as Frank.

Brian Houston said he was told in October 1999 that a man in his mid 30s, known as AHA, had come forward to reveal that Frank Houston had abused him about 30 years earlier.

He told the inquiry he was in no doubt that a criminal offence had been committed.

“Rightly or wrongly I genuinely believed that I would be pre-empting the victim if I were just to call the police,” he said.

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

Ex-South Dakota pastor accused of child sex crimes

SOUTH DAKOTA
Sioux City Journal

CANTON, S.D. | A former pastor at a South Dakota church is accused of having sex with a teenage girl while working there.

A federal grand jury in Lincoln County on Monday indicted Tony Haglund, who was a pastor in Canton, on three sex crime counts, including sexual contact with a child under 16 and sexual contact by a psychotherapist. He was arrested later that day in Florida’s Sumter County, where he works as a real estate agent, the Argus Leader reported.

A woman who answered Haglund’s cellphone Wednesday told The Associated Press that he had no comment.

Authorities allege that Haglund had sexual contact with the girl between January 2011 and December 2013, while he was a pastor at Canton Lutheran Church. She was 15 years old when the alleged abuse started.

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.

Fmr. Canton Pastor Arrested For Having Sex With Minor

SOUTH DAKOTA
KDLT

Jill Johnson

A former South Dakota pastor is accused of having sex with a 15-year-old girl.

The 49-year-old man was indicted on several charges by a Lincoln County grand jury. According to the indictment, Anthony Haglund was taken into custody in Sumter County, Florida without incident on Monday afternoon.

Haglund was once in a position of trust. Now the former pastor is being charged with having sex with a minor who, court papers say, was dependent on him.

Lincoln County States Attorney Tom Wollman said, “There was a relationship that existed our victim and the defendant here and it’s a very unique relationship and a relationship that’s protected by law and prohibits the conduct we’ve alleged in the indictment.”

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.

Hillsong founder says he did not contact police over paedophilia allegations against father

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

October 9, 2014

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

The founder of Hillsong Church, Brian Houston, said he knew paedophilia amounted to criminal conduct but did not contact police when he was informed of allegations that his father, Frank Houston, molested a young boy, a royal commission has heard.

Giving evidence before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Brian Houston told of his horror at hearing the sexual abuse claims.

The general manager of Hillsong, George Aghajanian, told him in a meeting in October 1999 that Frank Houston had been accused of abusing a young boy.

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Pastor charged with sexually abusing teen girl

UTAH
Deseret News

By McKenzie Romero, Deseret News
Published: Wednesday, Oct. 8 2014

SOUTH SALT LAKE — An Oregon pastor accused of sexually abusing a teenage girl while staying in her family’s home now faces felony charges.

Leonel Rocha-Pereda, 66, was charged in 3rd District Court on Wednesday with forcible sexual abuse, a second-degree felony, and three counts of sexual abuse of a minor, all class A misdemeanors.

Rocha-Pereda, a pastor from Salem, Oregon, met the 15-year-old girl at a Christian youth camp in July, charges state. He reportedly began exchanging emails with the girl that same month and came to stay with her family in September when he traveled to Utah to establish a new church in the Salt Lake area, according to police.

Rocha-Pereda reportedly gave the girl a cellphone, which he instructed her not to tell her parents about, to exchange sexually explicit messages and photos, police said. He is accused of touching the girl inappropriately in her home and while the two were shopping.

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Hillsong head did not report sexual abuse allegations because it was the victim’s ‘prerogative’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Tyron Butson

The head of the Hillsong Church has told an abuse inquiry he did not report allegations his preacher father had sexually abused a young boy to police because he believed it was the victim’s “prerogative” to report the incident.

Senior Pastor Brian Houston also today told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse he did not see a conflict of interest in his heading up the internal investigation into the allegations, despite being the son of the man accused.

The commission is examining the handling of allegations against Brian Houston’s father William Francis Houston, better known as Frank.

It has already heard Houston admitted to the abuse, which took place several decades ago in New Zealand and Australia.

But in late 1999 when allegations that the senior Houston had sexually abused a boy, who can only be identified as AHA, in the 1960s and 70s, Mr Houston did not go to the police.

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Hillsong ignored own rules on pedophile founder: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Rules were set aside by the executive of the Pentecostal movement when it came to dealing with allegations against confessed pedophile Frank Houston, the father of Hillsong senior pastor Brian Houston.

And the executive left it to Brian Houston to make decisions about his father, a national inquiry into child sexual abuse has been told.

Keith Ainge, former national secretary of the Assemblies of God, an umbrella body for the Pentecostal churches, said on Thursday that Brian Houston was the only conduit for information to the executive about allegations against his father.

The church elder told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that the first the national executive heard of allegations against Frank Houston was when his son Brian Houston called a special meeting of the executive on December 22, 1999.

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Former pastor accused of child sex crimes

SOUTH DAKOTA
Aberdeen News

CANTON — A former pastor at a South Dakota church is accused of having sex with a teenage girl while working there.

A federal grand jury in Lincoln County on Monday indicted Tony Haglund, who was a pastor in Canton, on three sex crime counts, including sexual contact with a child under 16 and sexual contact by a psychotherapist. He was arrested later that day in Florida’s Sumter County, where he works as a real estate agent, the Argus Leader reported.

A woman who answered Haglund’s cellphone Wednesday told The Associated Press that he had no comment.

Authorities allege that Haglund had sexual contact with the girl between January 2011 and December 2013, while he was a pastor at Canton Lutheran Church. She was 15 years old when the alleged abuse started.

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America South Dakota Synod asked Haglund to resign when the allegations arose, Bishop David Zellmer told the newspaper, and Haglund resigned on Sept. 15, 2013.

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Witchcraft-related child abuse on the rise in Britain, say police

UNITED KINGDOM
Reuters

Instances of child abuse related to witchcraft and a belief that children are possessed by evil spirits are on the rise in Britain, police said on Wednesday.

In the past year there have been 27 reported allegations, a rise from 24 the previous year. One case resulted in an arrest for rape and another in a charge for rape, they added.

Examples include a child who was forced to drink unknown substances, children being dunked in a bath, a pastor swinging a child around and banging its head and parents taking their children out of the country to attend an exorcism ceremony, in attempts to remove “evil spirits.”

“Abuse linked to belief is a horrific crime which is condemned by people of all cultures, communities and faiths,” Detective Superintendent Terry Sharpe from the Sexual Offences, Exploitation and Child Abuse Command said in a statement.

He was speaking ahead of a planned seminar in London on aimed at identifying and fighting faith-related child abuse.

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Wollongong lawyer Aaron Kernaghan praises royal commission into child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By LOUISE TURK Oct. 9, 2014

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is providing a unique opportunity for sexual assault victims to have their stories heard and understood, according to Wollongong-based lawyer Aaron Kernaghan.

Mr Kernaghan has been in the commission this week representing Barbara Taylor, a senior pastor with Emmanuel Christian Family Church in Plumpton.

Ms Taylor has been giving evidence in the public hearing in Sydney which is inquiring into the responses by Australian Christian Churches and two affiliated churches to allegations of child sexual abuse.

Mr Kernaghan, a former prosecutor, said the commission far surpassed anything he had seen in the criminal justice system in terms of providing opportunities for people directly or indirectly affected by child sexual abuse to share their experiences in appropriate ways.

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Hillsong founder defends not referring sex abuse allegations to police

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Michael Safi
theguardian.com, Thursday 9 October 2014

The founder of Sydney’s pentecostal “megachurch” Hillsong, Brian Houston, says he was “totally devastated” and broke down crying after being told his father, Frank, also a high-profile preacher, had been accused of child molestation.

But the pastor defended not referring the allegations that his father had molested a seven-year-old boy in Sydney more than 30 years earlier to the police, despite having no doubt “it was criminal conduct”.

Houston told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse on Thursday that the revelations about his father had hit him in “waves”.

“I was like, ‘Homosexual?’ getting my head around that, then thinking, ‘A minor? Hold on, we’re not just talking about homosexual, we’re talking about paedophilia’,” he said.

“I cried, I went home and I was devastated to be honest with you, I was totally devastated.”

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‘You never forget the moment …

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

‘You never forget the moment you find out your dad’s a paedophile’: Hillsong’s Brian Houston tells of the ‘devastating’ 10 seconds when he realised his father, Frank, was a paedophile

By Daniel Piotrowski for Daily Mail Australia and Australian Associated Press

Brian Houston, the son of Hillsong founder Frank Houston, has told a hearing about the moment he found out his father was a paedophile.

Mr Houston, the church’s senior pastor, first heard the allegations levelled by AHA – the name for the alleged victim – in late October 1999 during his weekly meeting with general manager George Aghajanian.

He said he did not immediately report the incident to the police as he did not want to ‘pre-empt’ the victim.

During the pivotal meeting, Mr Houston said he and Mr Aghajanian were discussing other matters until Mr Aghajanian said: ‘I need to talk to you about something else.

‘It’s not about you, it’s about your father.’

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UPDATE: Diocese of Winona official says no plans for bankruptcy, despite rumors

MINNESOTA
KTTC

WINONA, Minn. (KTTC) — A spokesperson for the Diocese of Winona says the diocese is not thinking of bankruptcy, despite that being mentioned in a letter from the bishop to the Vatican.
Documents released on Tuesday included a letter from Bishop John Quinn. The Director of Communications for the Diocese of Winona, Joel Hennessey, said the purpose of Quinn’s letter essentially was to give the Vatican an update on the state of affairs.

In the letter, Quinn wrote about clergymen involved in sexual abuse cases. Quinn goes on to write, “The Diocese of Winona has received several claims of negligence upon other offenders since the [Minnesota Child Victims Act] statute’s inception, anticipates several more, and anticipates eventually bankruptcy as a result of these lawsuits.”

However, Hennessey says there are no plans for bankruptcy right now. When explaining what Quinn was writing to the Vatican about, he said, “Letting them know that there was litigation happening, and knowing that there was likely more to come. A possible long-term affect could be bankruptcy if we weren’t able to resolve the litigation. As of now we have no plans of filing bankruptcy.”

You can read Bishop Quinn’s entire letter here.

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Former Clifton Park youth minister sentenced

NEW YORK
CN Weekly

By Glenn Griffith @CNWeekly

A former youth minister at Corpus Christi Church was given a $1,000 fine and had a five year order of protection imposed on him in an appearance Wednesday before Town Justice James Hughes in Clifton Park Town Court. The Oct. 8 sentencing was the result of Rev. James Michael Taylor’s guilty plea in August to one count of endangering the welfare of a minor, a Class A misdemeanor.

In addition to the fine and the order of protection he was assessed a $205 court surcharge and required to give a DNA sample.

Taylor was arrested in April and charged with having unforced contact with a 15-year-old girl from Clifton Park while serving in his position with the church.

In court Wednesday Saratoga County Assistant District Attorney Jennifer Buckley asked for a five year order of protection for the girl and her family. Buckley said the girl’s mother is satisfied that Taylor has pleaded guilty and she can now help her daughter deal with what has taken place.

Referring to Taylor’s former role as youth minister Buckley said the position was one of trust and authority in the community and, “in that he has failed miserably”.

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Parishioners kept in dark as priest is suspended amid historic sex abuse allegations

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

Oct 09, 2014 By Kenny Smith

FATHER Paul Morton’s congregation at St Bride’s RC Church in Cambuslang were asked to pray for the priest on Sunday – but were given no explanation about his absence.

A PRIEST has been suspended amid claims of sex abuse.

Father Paul Morton’s flock were mystified when he didn’t turn up for Mass. Police have now confirmed they are investigating allegations of historic abuse.

The congregation at St Bride’s RC Church in Cambuslang, near Glasgow, were asked to pray for
their parish priest on Sunday – but they were given no explanation about his absence.

Subsequent calls to the Scottish Catholic media office went unanswered.

But we can reveal Morton, 54, has been asked to step down.

Yesterday, a spokesman for the Diocese of Motherwell said: “As a result of an ongoing police inquiry, Father Paul Morton has been asked to take administrative leave from parish ministry for an unspecified period of time.

“Fr Morton has agreed to this and will not be living in the parish house or undertaking any public ministry.”

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Two More Men Sue Archdiocese Over Alleged McCormack Abuses

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

(STMW) — Two more men have filed a joint lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Chicago and Cardinal Francis George, alleging more abuses under convicted child molester and defrocked priest Daniel McCormack.

The two men filed the lawsuit anonymously Tuesday in Cook County Circuit Court. Both men allege that between 2000 and 2001, McCormack sexually abused the boys while at St. Agatha’s School on the West Side.

McCormack was originally arrested for sex crimes in January 2006, the Sun-Times reported previously. He was removed from the priesthood in November 2007 and pleaded guilty that year to abusing five children while he was a parish priest at St. Agatha on Chicago’s West Side. He was sentenced to five years in prison.

Last June, McCormack was charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse in a 2005 incident involving a minor boy, according to the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office.

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Priest accused of sexual abuse in PNG in suspected drug overdose

AUSTRALIA/NEW GUINEA
Radio Australia

[with audio]

An elderly Australian priest accused of sexually abusing boys in the 1960s has been rushed to hospital in Papua New Guinea, after a suspected drug overdose.

Priest accused of sexual abuse in PNG in suspected drug overdose (Credit: ABC)
It came just hours after Father Roger Mount was made aware of plans to deport him to Australia.

Roger Mount has previously denied the allegations of abuse but has also ignored a suspension from PNG’s Catholic church and has simply refused to leave his rural parish.

Neighbours and local church officials say two school-aged boys have been living with the elderly priest.

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Police investigate historic claims against Cambuslang priest

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

Oct 09, 2014 By Kenny Smith

Father Paul Morton moved to other duties

The priest at St Bride’s in Cambuslang has been suspended from his duties after police launched an investigation into historic sexual abuse allegations.

Father Paul Morton (54), who has been at St Bride’s Church for the past 14 years, didn’t take Mass on Sunday, with the Bishop of Motherwell stepping in to conduct the service in his place.

A spokesman for the Diocese of Motherwell has confirmed has has stepped aside from his duties at the church, as a result of an investigation by Police Scotland.

He said: “As a result of an ongoing police inquiry, Fr Paul Morton, parish priest of St Bride’s, Cambuslang, has been asked to take administrative leave from parish ministry for an unspecified period of time.

“Fr Morton has agreed to this and will not be living in the parish house or undertaking any public ministry. Fr James O’Kane, will act as administrator of St Bride’s during his absence.”

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Australian priest accused of abusing boys hospitalised before deportation from Papua New Guinea

AUSTRALIA/NEW GUINEA
7 News

ABC

BY PAPUA NEW GUINEA CORRESPONDENT LIAM COCHRANE
October 9, 2014

An elderly Australian priest accused of sexually abusing boys in the 1960s has been rushed to hospital in Papua New Guinea after a suspected drug overdose.

It came just hours after Father Roger Mount was made aware of plans to deport him to Australia.

Father Mount has denied the allegations of abuse, but has also ignored a 2011 suspension from PNG’s Catholic Church by simply refusing to leave his rural parish and overstaying his visa.

The Archbishop of Papua New Guinea, John Ribat, announced Father Mount was to be removed from the parish and deported after the Catholic Church in Australia paid out yet another compensation claim to one of his alleged victims this week.

The ABC tried to speak to Father Mount about the accusations, but he refused to leave the locked church.

Dorcas Ledo lives next door to the church and said, hours after this interaction, Father Mount’s driver delivered the daily newspaper with its front page headline “Paedophilia claim rocks church”.

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October 8, 2014

Saratoga Co. Priest Sentenced for Relationship with 15-Year-Old

NEW YORK
Time Warner Cable News

CLIFTON PARK, N.Y. — A Saratoga County priest has been sentenced for having physical contact with a 15-year-old girl.

James Michael Taylor or ‘Father Michael’ had a relationship with the girl between last October and April.

He was a deacon and youth minister at the Corpus Christi Church in Clifton Park at the time.

Investigators say Taylor’s relationship with the girl involved physical contact text messages and photos.

He pleaded guilty in August to endangering the welfare of a child.

The judge said Wednesday this was the most complicated case he’s ever had.

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Winona Diocese Shows Change?

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

10-08-2014

Jennifer Haselberger

This morning’s edition of the Winona Daily News (online version) notes that on the same day that personnel files of fourteen priests credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors were released to the public, the Diocese of Winona also issued a statement announcing that a math teacher at one of the diocese’s Catholic high schools was terminated following her arrest for suspicion of criminal sexual conduct involving a minor child. Contrasting the handling of the recent accusation against the teacher with the newly illuminated historical practices of the diocese, the author of the article suggests that the diocese’s response to the arrest [along with its handling of the case of Rev. Leo Charles Koppala] suggests ‘a dramatically changed approach to sexual misconduct by church employees’.

Eleven years after the implementation of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People/Essential Norms, one would hope that a drastically different approach would be evident. Yet, the release of documents yesterday raises questions about the motivation for that change. Documents related to the laicization of Leland Smith indicate that while (Father) Smith was initially removed from ministry in 1994 following credible accusations of sexual abuse of minors, he was later permitted to resume a limited form of priestly ministry until 2002, when the diocese began to receive emails from victims regarding abuse they had suffered at the hands of (Father) Smith. There is no indication that the accusations the diocese received in 2002 and 2005 were reported to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, as was required following the promulgation of Sacramentorum Sanctitatis Tutella in 2001. Rather, the diocese permitted Leland Smith to remain a priest, his status unclear to the general public, priests, and even his family. This situation continued even after the diocese received a complaint from another priest that (Father) Smith was attending funerals in clerical dress and serving as a lector.

It was only in December of 2013, with the release of the names of credibly accused priests (including Smith) imminent that the Diocese of Winona altered its position on Leland Smith and forced him to request laicization. Had such a disclosure not been mandated by the civil courts, it appears extremely unlikely that Leland Smith would ever have been subjected to ecclesiastical penalties.

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NJ–Priest abuse trial starts; Victims urge others to speak up

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, 10/8

Statement by Mark Crawford, New Jersey director of SNAP, Survivors Network of those abused by Priests ( 732 632 7687, mecrawf@comcast.net )

A Catholic priest is facing criminal charges of molesting a New Jersey mom and her kids. We applaud this brave woman for cooperating with police and prosecutors. And we applaud law enforcement officials for investigating and pursuing this case.

[Asbury Park Press]

We urge anyone in the Trenton area – whether victim, witness or whistleblower – to speak up now and safeguard innocent kids and vulnerable adults by exposing wrongdoers. We especially call on current and former church employees to act responsibly and share what they know or suspect about Catholic clerics who commit or conceal child sex crimes with the police, prosecutors, parishioners and the public right away.

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Psychiatrist testifies on the plausibility of altar boy’s memory in sexual abuse trial

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

BY JUDY L. THOMASTHE KANSAS CITY STAR
10/07/2014

A Jackson County jury on Tuesday got a crash course on repressed memory as a sexual abuse lawsuit trial against the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph stretched through a seventh day.

The day saw occasional heated exchanges as attorneys challenged opposition witnesses.

The trial stems from a lawsuit filed by Jon David Couzens, a former altar boy who says that when he was a student at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary School in Independence in the early 1980s, the late Monsignor Thomas O’Brien sexually abused him. Couzens alleges that the diocese was told repeatedly that O’Brien was a danger to children but failed to prevent the abuse.

Couzens, 44, filed the lawsuit in 2011 after a longtime friend called and told him her daughter was possibly the victim of another priest. He said the phone call began unleashing the memories of his own abuse that he had repressed for decades.

The diocese contends that no credible evidence exists to prove Couzens’ allegations and argues that his claims of repressed memory are invalid. O’Brien, who has been the subject of dozens of sexual abuse lawsuits, died last year at age 87.

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Father of Hillsong founder given ‘retirement package’ after child abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

OCTOBER 09, 2014 1

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

THE father of Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston was ­allowed to resign and offered a ­financial “retirement package” by a meeting of church elders, ­despite admitting he sexually abused young boys, a royal commission has heard.

Confidential documents tendered to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse show church officials within the Pentecostal movement were aware in 2000 that William Francis “Frank” Houston abused seven boys.

Frank Houston admitted the offences and was initially suspended by his son after the first claims came to light in 1999, the commission heard. Brian Houston took over his father’s Sydney Christian Life Centre the same year, merging it with his own Hills Christian Life Centre in the city’s northwest to form the Hillsong Church.

Frank Houston’s resignation letter to the City Hillsong Church in November 2000 makes no mention of the allegations. “I hereby wish to tender my resignation … as I feel it is time for (his wife) Hazel and I to enter ­retirement,” says the letter.

Minutes of a “special elders meeting” held “in the boardroom of Hillsong Church” show Brian Houston was present when his ­father’s resignation letter was ­tabled five days later.

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Psychiatrist testifies in Catholic Diocese suit

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Lebanon Daily Record

Associated Press

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A California psychiatrist explained to jurors how repressed memory works in the seventh day of a trial in a lawsuit against the Kansas City-St. Joseph Catholic Diocese.

A former altar boy sued the diocese in 2011, saying he was sexually abused by a priest when he was a student in the 1980s at the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary School. He claims the diocese was repeatedly told the priest, who died last year, was a danger to children, but failed to prevent the abuse.

The diocese said there’s no credible evidence to prove the man’s allegations and argues that claims of his repressed memories are invalid.

The Associated Press doesn’t typically name people who say they’re victims of sexual abuse.

The plaintiff said he decided to sue the group after a longtime friend called and said her daughter was possibly the victim of another priest. He had suppressed recollections that came flooding back when his friend called, San Francisco psychiatrist Walter Sipe said.

Sipe spoke for two hours Tuesday about repressed memory, which is when someone forgetting a past traumatic event for an extended period of time, The Kansas City Star reported (http://bit.ly/1rX5VDN ). He diagnosed the plaintiff with delayed onset post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

Sipe said it’s “absolutely essential” for a person to seek care after a sexual violence occurs to decrease their stress and help them talk about what happened. Treatment helps put the event into context for a victim, which helps with their memory of what happened. If no help is given to a victim after the incident occurs, there’s no way to make sense of it for them, he said.

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Pennsylvania Priest Held on Sex Tourism Charges

PENNSYLVANIA
Courthouse News Service

By DAN MCCUE
ShareThis
(CN) – A Roman Catholic priest from Pennsylvania was indicted today on charges of traveling to a foreign country to engage in sex with children and of possession of child pornography.

The Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 69, a priest at the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, was arrested two weeks ago and has been in custody since his arrest.

According to the indictment and other court documents, Maurizio traveled from Pennsylvania to Honduras each year from 1999 to 2009 to assist a non-profit organization that provides services to children there.

Prosecutors allege that while he was in Honduras, Maurizio provided money or candy to minor boys in an orphanage and engaged in unlawful sexual activities.

They also allege Maurizio is also charged with possession of material depicting minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct.

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Pennsylvania priest indicted on child sexual tourism charges

PENNSYLVANIA
United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)

WASHINGTON, Pa. — A Pennsylvania Roman Catholic priest was indicted Tuesday on charges of foreign travel to engage in illicit sexual conduct with minors and possession of child pornography. The indictment follows an investigation by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Pittsburgh.

Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 69, a priest at the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, was originally charged by criminal complaint and arrested on Sept. 25. He has been in custody since his arrest.

According to allegations in the indictment and complaint, each year between 1999 and 2009, Maurizio traveled from Pennsylvania to Honduras to assist a non-profit organization that provides services to children there. While he was in Honduras, Maurizio provided money or candy to minor boys in an orphanage and engaged in unlawful sexual activities. Maurizio is also charged with possession of material depicting the sexual exploitation of a child.

Following search warrants executed Sept. 12, at the rectory at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Central City, Pennsylvania, and a farm owned by Maurizio in Windber, Pennsylvania, law enforcement seized various computers and electronic devices, including a hard drive allegedly containing images depicting minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct.
The charges in the complaint and indictment are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

The case is being investigated by HSI’s Pittsburgh Office and prosecuted by Criminal Division Trial Attorney Amy E. Larson of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS) and Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephanie Haines of the Western District of Pennsylvania.

HSI requests that anyone with information about this person contact the agency by calling the 24-hour HSI Tip line at 1-866-DHS-2ICE. The public can also submit an online tip at www.ice.gov/tips/ or by downloading the Operation Predator smartphone app and submitting a tip via the app. All tips will remain anonymous.

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Brick priest trial: Sex assault or tall tale?

NEW JERSEY
Asbury Park Press

Kathleen Hopkins, @Khopkinsapp October 8, 2014

TOMS RIVER – Did a popular parish priest take advantage of a trust to molest a mother and her two children, or did the family concoct the story for financial reasons?

Those were two scenarios presented to a jury Wednesday as Marukudiyil Velan, known to parishioners at the Church of the Visitation in Brick as “Father Chris,’’ went on trial on molestation charges.

“We’re here today because there ias a shattering of trust,’’ Assistant Ocean County Prosecutor Terry Ann LInardakis told the jury. “We’re here today because Mr. Velan took advantage of the relationship he had with this family and touched them inappropriately.’’

But defense attorney S. Karl Mohel, referring to the defendant throughout his opening argument as Father Chris, said his client is innocent, and his accusers have financial motives for falsely accusing him.

The mother had previously borrowed thousands of dollars from Velan to buy a car, Mohel said. Now, he said, she has filed a lawsuit against Velan, Visitation Church and the Archdiocese of Trenton.

“This is a family that was getting day-old Tasty Cakes,’’ Mohel said, explaining that Velan would go around to a local baked good store to pick up day-old products and deliver them to poor families in his parish, including his accusers.

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Sydney chief Chabad rabbi’s wife sorry for offensive email to child abuse victim

AUSTRALIA
Haaretz (Israel)

The wife of the chief Chabad rabbi in Sydney has apologized for offending a child sex abuse victim on the eve of Yom Kippur.

On Monday, Pnina Feldman said she regretted the email she had sent three days earlier to Manny Waks, who went public with his story of child sex abuse in the Jewish community, stressing she had written a “private” email to Waks.

Waks, an advocate for child sex abuse victims, released Feldman’s email to the media.

Feldman sent the email after receiving a request to support a petition calling on two senior Chabad leaders in Melbourne to resign from their positions over the child sex abuse scandal that embroiled Chabad’s Yeshivah College in the 1980s and 1990s.

“In my robust and emotional email I employed offensive language which I remorsefully regret and unreservedly apologize for,” she wrote. “I agree with all efforts to prosecute pedophiles but take issue with some aspects of Manny’s crusade against Melbourne Yeshivah.”

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Vatican’s abuse panel plans to include more experts, another survivor

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Carol Glatz
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — A papal commission on child protection will be expanding its nine-member panel to include more experts and another survivor of clerical abuse.

The Commission for the Protection of Minors, which Pope Francis established last December, is now awaiting the pope’s approval of members’ latest efforts as they aim to lay out a pastoral approach to helping victims and prevent future abuse.

Marie Collins, a commission member and survivor of clerical abuse, told the Associated Press Oct. 6 that the specially appointed group has agreed on its provisional statutes and finalized a list of potential new members, adding experts from other countries and disciplines as well as including another survivor.

Currently the commission includes: U.S. Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley of Boston, head of the commission; U.S. Father Robert W. Oliver, commission secretary; Collins and six, mostly European, experts in mental health, civil and church law, and moral theology.

The group, which had its third meeting Oct. 4-5 at the Vatican, is awaiting the pope’s final approval of their proposals.

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Irish survivor on Pope’s sex abuse commission feels hopeful for progress

IRELAND
Irish Central

James O’Shea @irishcentral October 07, 2014

After what has been referred to as a “lost year” Pope Francis’ sex abuse commission has made progress this week.

During a meeting last weekend the commission approved its legal statutes, proposed new members and divided up work to focus on reaching out to survivors, holding bishops accountable and keeping pedophiles out of the priesthood.

Over the past year it seemed that the commission, established by Pope Francis, had languished and lacked organization, a clear mission, office space, funding and a full membership roster.

On Monday, Marie Collins, an Irish sex abuse survivor, told the AP they had made progress during their first meeting after the Pope assigned the Vatican’s sex crimes prosecutor, Monsignor Robert Oliver, to the post of full-time sescretary to the commission.

The nine commission members have approved their provisional statutes laying out the scope of their work. This will now be put to Francis for approval.

They finalized a list of other member candidates whom the Pope must also approve. There will be fewer than 20 commissioners altogether, including experts from other fields and geographic locations and another survivor of abuse.

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Central City priest indicted on sex abuse, child pornography

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

BY DAVID HURST DHURST@TRIBDEM.COM

A Central City priest now faces a federal indictment, accused of paying candy and cash to orphans in Honduras for unlawful sexual activities.

The Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio, 69, is accused of foreign travel to engage in illicit sexual conduct with minors and child porn possession, the Department of Justice said in a release Wednesday.
Maurizio has been lodged in Cambria County Prison since his late September arrest.

Charges were initially filed after federal agents raided the rectory at Our Lady Queen of Angels and seized computers and other devices, including a hard drive prosecutors say contained minors engaged in sexual conduct.

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HIA: Pensioner says Nazareth House nuns ‘medieval’

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

Nuns at a children’s home in Northern Ireland “operated in a medieval vacuum”, a witness has told the Historical Abuse Inquiry.

The pensioner was giving evidence via videolink from Perth in Australia.

He said he was sexually and physically abused both at Nazareth House in Belfast and at Rubane House in County Down.

The man said that after he was transferred in 1956 to a boys’ home in Australia, he was also abused there.

The inquiry is currently examining alleged abuse at Rubane House, the De La Salle Catholic institution on the Ards peninsula.

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CARDINALS ACCOLADE

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

. .Belleville’s Fr. Leo Hayes, who was embroiled in a real estate scandal years ago, has been tapped to lead a tour of Italy’s Sorrento peninsula organized by the Swansea-based Golden Frontier Travel, according to an ad in the St. Louis archdiocese’s newspaper. The agency was founded by the now-defrocked Fr. Robert Vonnahem. (Maybe Hayes will regale his fellow travelers with stories about how John Wayne Gacy served as one of his altar boys when the priest was the prison chaplain at the Menard Correctional Center, the largest maximum-security prison in Illinois.

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Benedict Groeschel, 81, Dies; Priest Aided Poor and Drew a TV Flock

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By PAUL VITELLO
OCT. 7, 2014

The Rev. Benedict J. Groeschel, a Franciscan priest and author known in New York City for his efforts on behalf of the poor and familiar to a worldwide television audience as the bearded friar who denounced modernism and news reporting on sexual abuse by priests, died on Friday in Totowa, N.J. He was 81.

The Franciscan Friars of the Renewal, a branch of the Franciscan order he helped found in the South Bronx in 1987 to aid poor and homeless people, announced his death, saying he had had a series of strokes in recent years.

Father Groeschel established a many-sided and sometimes contentious public profile during his career as a beloved street priest, civil rights activist, priests’ psychologist, author of religious self-help books and popular host on the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN), a quasi-official Catholic broadcast system that says it reaches more than 100 million viewers.

Wearing the coarse-wool hooded habit and rope belt of a medieval mendicant, Father Groeschel wrote and spoke passionately to his audience for decades, condemning what he called the hedonism at the core of contemporary culture; sex outside marriage, including masturbation; and a declining level of doctrinal obedience among the faithful.

At the same time, he cut a benevolent figure in the South Bronx, where he lived and worked for many years as a member of St. Crispin’s Friary, the community established by his Franciscan order. (“As a psychologist, I have to say I have a Santa Claus complex,” he told The New York Times in 2007.) He was a presence on the streets by day and on the lecture circuit at night, earning fees that largely paid for the friary’s homeless shelter, food pantry, after-school drop-in center, drug counseling and holiday gift distribution program.

He helped found a pregnancy crisis center, a home for unwed mothers and a treatment facility for wayward teenagers.Beginning in 1973, Father Groeschel was for decades the director of spiritual development for the Archdiocese of New York, a job that drew him into the sexual abuse scandal of the 2000s as a defender of the priesthood.

Beginning in 2002, when a tide of allegations began to emerge, Father Groeschel described the news reports about them as a “media persecution” of the church whose purpose, he told a Yonkers congregation, was “to destroy whatever public influence the church might have.” Many church officials concurred in that view.

In the same speech he said that working with priests as he did, he had seen a side of the story that the newspapers had missed.

“I’ve met with some of those people,” he said, referring to priests accused of abuse, “and they are among the most penitent people I have met in my life. When you pick up the media, you don’t hear about the penitence.”

In 2012, Father Groeschel provoked outrage when he said in an interview that “youngsters” were often to blame when priests abused them. “A lot of the cases, the youngster — 14, 16, 18 — is the seducer,” he told National Catholic Register, a Catholic newspaper owned by EWTN.

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Somerset County priest indicted on child-sex charges related to Honduras orphanage work

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

By Liz Zemba
Wednesday, Oct. 8, 2014

A federal grand jury has indicted a Somerset County priest on allegations he sexually exploited teenage boys at a Honduran orphanage and possessed child pornography.

The indictment against the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr., who was arrested on Sept. 25 on the same allegations, was handed down Tuesday. It charges Maurizio with engaging in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places and possession of materiel depicting the sexual exploitation of a minor.

The indictment follows a series of earlier motions in which Maurizio’s attorney, Steven Passarello of Altoona, had sought his release, partially on the grounds the priest was not under indictment.

In a criminal complaint, federal officials said Maurizio, under the guise of doing relief work through a self-run charity, visited an orphanage in El Progreso, Honduras, at various times for a decade, promising candy and cash to orphaned boys to watch them shower, have sex or fondle them.

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Local Priest Charged With Molesting Orphans During Missionary Trips To Honduras

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – A local priest has been charged after allegedly molesting children in a foreign country.

According to a Department of Justice release, Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 69, was arrested on Sept. 25, 2014.

Maurizio Jr. was a priest at the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

According to the criminal complaint, he traveled to Honduras every year from 1999 to 2009 to help a non-profit organization that assists children.

During that time, Maurizio Jr. allegedly gave young boys candy and money and engaged in sexual activities with them.

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Feldmans and Waks at war

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

A WAR of words has broken out between Sydney’s top Chabad family and child-sexual-abuse victim Manny Waks. Rabbi Eli Feldman is considering his options following a public Facebook post by Waks which said “spreading hate, lies and distortions” was “unbecoming of a rabbi”.

The post, which doesn’t specifically name Feldman, has since been removed, but The AJN understands the spat erupted over differing versions of the circumstances surrounding Waks’ move to Yeshiva in Sydney as a teenager.

The post came just days after Rebbetzin Pnina Feldman, Eli Feldman’s mother, was forced to apologise after she sent Waks an email on Erev Yom Kippur, in which she said people described him as a “lowlife”.

“I haven’t met a person yet with one nice word to say about you. Most people consider you a lowlife,” Rebbetzin Feldman wrote.

She went on to tell the CEO and founder of Tzedek, an advocate for Jewish survivors of child sexual abuse, to “get over it”, adding that he needed “counselling” and that his “blame-game” was “unjust, unwarranted, undeserved and wicked”.

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MN–Victims call on University to release full report

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, October 8

Statement by Verne Wagner of Duluth, Northeast MN (Duluth, MN & Superior, WI) SNAP director ( 218- 340-1277, lwagsmn@yahoo.com )

St. Thomas University officials claim they’re blameless in the case of Fr. Michael Keating. No one should believe them until they release the full report of their so-called “investigation.” Even then, people should be skeptical.

[Pioneer Press]

First, there’s no “independent” review or investigation when those being investigated pick and pay those doing the investigating. This law firm had no subpoena power. They could see only what university officials said they could see. So it’s at stretch, at best, and inaccurate, at worst, to call this an “investigation.”

Second, if the university did nothing wrong, why conceal the report and release only snippets? On its face, that doesn’t pass the smell test.

Third, if the university unknowingly put its students at risk – by keeping an accused child molester on its staff and campus – it needs to take action. For starters, it needs to work harder to find out whether any student or employee or employee’s children were hurt by Fr. Keating. And it needs to deter future deceit and recklessness by at least publicly denouncing the Catholic archdiocesan officials who acted irresponsibly and protected Fr. Keating while endangering the St. Thomas community.

St. Thomas’ next step is pretty simple – seek out victims, release the full report and chastise the wrongdoers. Otherwise, school officials look timid, insincere and ineffectual.

We urge anyone in the St. Thomas community – whether victim, witness or whistleblower – to speak up now and safeguard innocent kids and vulnerable adults by exposing wrongdoers. We especially call on current and former university employees to act responsibly and share what they know or suspect about Catholic clerics who commit or conceal child sex crimes with the police, prosecutors, parishioners and the public right away.

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MN–Crookston bishop hid predator priest for a decade

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, October 8, 2014

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

Newly released records show that Crookston’s bishop kept silent about a credibly accused and suspended predator priest in Winona for at least a decade.

[Minnesota

As a top ranking church official in Winona diocese, then – Fr. Michael J. Hoeppner knew that Fr. Leland J Smith was a danger to children. He explained to Smith that he was on “administrative leave” due to charges of sexual abuse.

But apparently, at least as early as April of 2003, Fr. Hoeppner as far as we can tell did not tell police parishioners or the public about Fr.Smith.

In 2013, Fr. Smith was publicly “outed” as a credibly accused child molester because of the court ordered release of the names of credible accused clergy.

[Winona Daily News]

In 2007, Fr. Hoeppner was promoted by the pope to become Bishop Hoeppner, the head of the Crookston diocese.

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Australian Catholic priest accused of child abuse preparing to leave PNG

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Wednesday 8 October 2014

An Australian Catholic priest accused of child abuse is preparing to return to Australia from his home of 30 years in Papua New Guinea.

Father Roger Mount is expected to arrive in Port Moresby on Thursday, the first step in his journey back to Australia.

The elderly priest, who was formerly a brother with the St John of God order, has been living in PNG without a visa.

Mount has been accused of abusing boys in his care at St John of God institutions in Australia in the 1960s, Fairfax Media has reported.

He was known as Brother Gabriel Mount at the time.

A former resident of the Kendall Grange home in NSW alleges that Mount abused him when he was 12 years old, Fairfax reported.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 8 October 2014 (VIS) – The Holy Father has: …

– Bishop Celso Morga Iruzubieta, secretary of the Congregation for the Clergy, as coadjutor of the archdiocese of Merida-Badajoz (area 17,405, population 597,300, Catholics 588,100, priests 311, religious 637), Spain.

– appointed Msgr. Levi Bonatto, of the personal prelature of the Holy Cross and Opus Dei, as auxiliary of the archdiocese of Goiania (area 13,320, population 2,024,000, Catholics 1,221,000, priests 208, permanent deacons 14, religious 573), Brazil. The bishop-elect was born in Sao Jose dos Pinhais, Brazil in 1957 and was ordained a priest in 1996. He holds a degree in economics from the Federal University of the State of Parana and a degree in canon law from the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome, and has served in a number of pastoral roles, including chaplain of the “Castelo” cultural centre in Campinas and of the “Alfa e Esplanada” cultural centre in Sao Jose dos Campos; spiritual father for seminarians in the diocese of Sao Jose dos Campos; chaplain of the “Os Pinhais” professional centre for girls with limited economic resources, and professor of canon law and theology at the “Studium Generale” of Opus Dei in Sao Paulo. He is currently chaplain of the “Marumbi” cultural centre, coordinator of the “Santa Cruz” priestly society in the State of Parana and confessor at the “Sao Jose” minor seminary of Curitiba.

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Curial official transferred to Spanish archdiocese

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

Catholic World News – October 08, 2014

The Holy See Press Office has announced that Pope Francis has transferred the secretary of the Congregation for the Clergy to a Spanish archdiocese.

Archbishop Celso Morga Iruzubieta, 66, is now the coadjutor archbishop of Mérida-Badajoz.

The prelate was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Calahorra y La Calzada-Logroño in 1972. Fifteen years later, he began to work in the offices of the Congregation for the Clergy, and Pope Benedict named him the dicastery’s secretary in 2010.

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Church doctrine on family can develop, papal advisor says

VATICAN CITY
John Thavis

When Pope Francis called for frank and open talk at the Synod of Bishops, he was encouraging bishops to speak up “without fear that Cardinal Mueller will come after you,” one of the pope’s closest associates said today.

The humorous aside – well, I think it was humorous – came from Archbishop Victor Manuel Fernandez, rector of the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, who is reputedly one of the pope’s top theological advisors.

Archbishop Fernandez was addressing reporters on the synod’s third day, and he said the pope’s call for an honest exchange was necessary if the assembly wanted to be productive.

The reference to Cardinal Gerhard Mueller prompted chuckles in the press room. Mueller, head of the Vatican’s doctrinal congregation, has been among those sharply criticizing a proposal by Cardinal Walter Kasper that the synod find a way for divorced and remarried Catholics to receive Communion.

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Today: Live discussion of the Synod with Cardinals Pell and Dolan

ROME
Crux

By Crux Staff

A special Crux event from Rome October 8, 2014

Crux is honored to present a special panel discussion today from Rome on the impact of Pope Francis and the Synod of Bishops.

On the panel will be Cardinal George Pell, in charge of reforming the Vatican’s finances at the new Secretariat of the Economy; Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York; and Crux staff John L. Allen Jr, Inés San Martín, and Michael O’Loughlin.

Monsignor James Checchio of the Pontifical North American College and Boston Globe editor Brian McGrory will also offer introductory remarks.

The event will be available for live viewing on this page starting at 1 p.m. EDT/10 a.m. PDT/1600 GMT, and then archived here for your viewing convenience later.

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After an Australia-wide career, this priest awaits a court sentence in one State

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 8 October 2014)

Catholic priest Father Glenn Humphreys, 61, who has ministered around Australia, is about to be sentenced by a judge for crimes committed in Western Australia. Father Humphreys has also ministered in New South Wales (at St Stanislaus College, Bathurst) and in north Queensland but the current sentencing is confined to West Australian matters.

Father Humphreys is a member of the Australia-wide Catholic order of Vincentian Fathers, which has its national headquarters in Sydney.

Father Humphreys moved to Perth in January 1983 after working on the staff of St Stanislaus College, Bathurst, New Souh Wales.

On 21 August 2014, Father Humphreys was found guilty by a West Australian jury of sexually abusing a teenage boy on church property in Western Australia between 1983 and 1986 while he was assistant priest at a church in Perth.

After six hours of deliberation, a W.A. District Court jury convicted Humphreys of four counts of unlawful and indecent assault.

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Detroit-Area Priest Convicted Of Stealing From Angel Fund Charity

MICHIGAN
CBS Detroit

DETROIT (WWJ/AP) – A jury has found a 58-year-old Detroit-area Catholic priest guilty of stealing money from a charity for the poor after he denied the charges and said he wrongly signed a confession to police.

The Rev. Timothy Kane was convicted Tuesday in Wayne County Circuit Court of crimes including embezzlement between $1,000 and $20,000 from a charitable institution. The 58-year-old will be sentenced in December.

Kane testified Tuesday that he didn’t steal money from the Angel Fund, an Archdiocese of Detroit charity fund created to assist people in need. Kane says confusion caused by diabetes made him sign a confession to police after his February arrest.

In that confession, Kane admitted to stealing the money for a prison inmate he had befriended. According to the confession statement, Kane said he had a sexual relationship with the inmate and embezzled money for the man and his family. Kane said he “misappropriated funds” for the man’s personal needs, as well as to buy gifts and gas for the man’s family members and help pay their rent, according to the statement. Kane also said he felt “bad about what I’ve done,” a detective testified.

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Altoona-Johnstown priest indicted on child-sex charges

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

October 8, 2014

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A Catholic priest in the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese arrested last week on charges of sexually abusing boys in Honduras was indicted Tuesday by a federal grand jury.

The Rev. Joseph Maurizio, 69, was charged with engaging in illicit sex in foreign places and possession of child pornography.

He remains in custody pending a detention hearing in federal court in Johnstown. The U.S. attorney’s office has requested he be held pending trial as a risk to flee and as a danger to the community. No date has been set for the hearing.

Agents from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security arrested Father Maurizio on Thursday following an investigation that began in February. Agents had raided the chapel and rectory of his church, Our Lady Queen of Angels, on Sept. 12 and seized numerous computers, disks and other electronic items on which they said they found child porn.

Agents said Father Maurizio had been visiting an orphanage in Honduras for a decade until 2009, when ProNino USA, the charity that runs the orphanage, learned of the child-sex allegations and confronted the priest back in Pennsylvania. He denied the accusations and threatened the group, saying he would withhold funding for the orphanage if it persisted with an investigation, according to an affidavit.

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Priest says he will return from Ireland to face abuse charges

UNITED KINGDOM
Manchester Evening News

A priest says he will voluntarily return from Ireland to face a string of abuse charges involving schoolgirls.

The Crown Prosecution Service has authorised Greater Manchester Police to charge Canon Mortimer Stanley, 82, after numerous complaints by former pupils at a Rochdale school.

Today his solicitor strongly denied claims by GMP sources that Canon Stanley was being advised not to attend Rochdale Police Station, and that he may have to be extradited, as, because he is not in the UK, a summons may not compel him to attend.

But GMP said they had been negotiating since August 27 for Canon Stanley to return to Rochdale to be charged.

His solicitor, Peter Hayes, a Partner at Fieldings Porter Solicitors based in Manchester, has now submitted a formal complaint to GMP.

He said he had been engaged in lengthy correspondence with GMP for a number of months and it had never been suggested that Canon Stanley will not return to England to face the allegations.

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Child sex abuse victims face hurdles seeking redress in court

JAPAN
Japan Times

BY TOMOHIRO OSAKI
STAFF WRITER
OCT 8, 2014

To many survivors of childhood molestation in Japan, seeking retribution from their abusers has been unimaginably difficult.

By the time they are mentally and financially ready to confront their tormentors, the time for pursuing legal action has often long expired. Unlike in some other countries, courts in Japan do not suspend statutes of limitations or extend them so that sexual abuse victims can file lawsuits when, later in life, they come to grips with their suffering.

In that sense, a recent ruling handed down by the Sapporo High Court is no doubt a rarity. It declared a rape victim in her 40s eligible for ¥20 million in compensation, overturning a lower court decision that the statute of limitations in connection with the abuse she was seeking damages for had expired years earlier.

“The ruling is wonderful,” said her lead lawyer, Toko Teramachi, who asked that her client remain anonymous to protect her privacy.

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The synod’s key twist: The sudden return of gradualism

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor October 8, 2014

ROME — All of a sudden at the 2014 Synod of Bishops on the family, “gradualism” as a concept in both Catholic moral theology and pastoral practice, which not so long ago seemed on the verge of being stricken from the official lexicon, is back with a vengeance.

There have been multiple references so far to the “law of graduality,” more commonly referred to by theologians over the years as “gradualism.” Its apparent popularity may offer a clue to how things are evolving in the keenly watched debate over divorced and remarried Catholics, but understanding why requires a bit of background.

At one level, gradualism is no more than the common sense observation that virtues such as honesty and courage aren’t all-or-nothing propositions, and that people move towards them through stages and at different speeds. It implies that just because someone’s current situation falls short of perfection doesn’t mean it has no moral value, and it’s often better to encourage the positive elements in someone’s life rather than to chastise their flaws.

It was probably that sense of gradualism Pope Benedict XVI had in mind in 2010 when he said in an interview with a German journalist that if a male prostitute uses a condom to try to avoid infecting people with HIV/AIDS, it can be “a first step in a movement toward a different way, a more human way, of living sexuality.”

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Father Under Fire…

OHIO
Cleveland Scene

Father Under Fire: A Westlake Church Rallies Around its Pastor After Charges that He Sexually Abused His Adopted Daughter

By Doug Brown

[Editor’s note: This content includes accounts of sexual abuse and may be triggering for some readers.]

Faith is a powerful thing, and the flock at Church on the Rise in Westlake has it in spades. Some beliefs, after all, cannot be shaken: faith in God, faith in their religion, or faith in their pastor, no matter what prosecutors and an alleged victim say.

That’s why, service after service, week after week, families continue to pack the modern Westlake church to take in the word of pastor Paul Endrei — simply Pastor Paul, as they call him — the church’s founder who’s out of jail after posting bond, the pastor who’s awaiting trial on six felony charges of allegedly sexually abusing his adopted daughter. Also a recipient of that faith is assistant pastor Jordan Endrei, Paul’s biological son, who at 26 is also awaiting trial for one felony count of sexual contact a minor.

“If you know the guy, you know it’s not true,” says one twentysomething member of the Church on the Rise before a recent Sunday evening meeting for young adults and teens. “More importantly, if you know her…”

He trails off in unspoken allegation. The victim here is the black sheep, not the alleged perpetrator.

“It’s unfortunate,” the man continues. “The enemy, he likes to attack us, especially when good things are happening. But we’re not worried about it one bit.”

That’s a near-universal sentiment held by members of the socially conservative church. Pastor Paul is unequivocally innocent, beyond reproach. And good things are happening, now more than ever. The church — and business — is booming.

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Child sexual abuse claims date back to before Hillsong existed, says Houston

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Helen Davidson
theguardian.com, Tuesday 7 October 2014

The head of the popular Hillsong Church, Brian Houston, has sought to distance his organisation from the actions of his father, Frank Houston, whose alleged sexual abuse of up to nine children is under examination at the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

Pentecostal preacher Frank Houston, who died in 2004, confessed in 2000 to sexually abusing a boy in New Zealand more than 30 years earlier. He was immediately sacked by his son, Brian Houston, who was then national president of the Assemblies of God, a worldwide grouping of Pentecostal churches.

In a statement outside the royal commission on Wednesday morning, Brian Houston commended the hearing for making church leaders “uncomfortable” because “we have a collective responsibility to protect children”.

“We must be diligent and never let our guard down,” he said.

However, he said people should understand that the abuse claims being examined happened before Hillsong existed, “when I was a teenager myself”.

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‘Chilli rubbed in child’s eye to remove evil spirit’ …

UNITED KINGDOM
London 24

‘Chilli rubbed in child’s eye to remove evil spirit’ say police as they launch witchcraft abuse summit

Alain Tolhurst

Allegations of child abuse linked to witchcraft in London including rape, assault and neglect are on the rise say police, who today launch a summit to tackle the issue.

In the past year 27 investigations have been launched into claims children have been force-fed unknown substances to rid them of evil spirits, dunked in a bath to wash away evil spirits, and that a pastor swung a child around and banged their head to drive out the devil.

A spokesman for the Met said previous calls have included one alleging chilli peppers were rubbed into a child’s eyes to remove the evil spirit.

And there have been claims of parents removing children from schools in London and taking them out of the country to attend an exorcism ceremony.

A number of horrific child killings have been linked to witchcraft-related beliefs, including the murder of 15-year-old Kristy Bamu, tortured and drowned by his sister and her boyfriend in 2010, and the death of Victoria Climbie.

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Suspended evangelist Frank Houston continued to preach …

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Suspended evangelist Frank Houston continued to preach despite sex abuse claims, royal commission told

October 8, 2014

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

High-profile evangelist Frank Houston continued to preach and deliver televised sermons despite being suspended from his church over child molestation claims, a witness told the royal commission on child sexual abuse.

Barbara Taylor, a senior pastor with Emmanuel Christian Family Church in Plumpton, told the royal commission she had raised concerns about the sex abuse allegations with the state executive of the Assemblies of God in 1998, but it took months before officials took action.

Ms Taylor said she raised the alarm after learning that Houston allegedly molested a young boy, given the pseudonym AHA, for a number of years from the late 1960s.

She told the commission she voiced her concerns in 1998 but Houston was not suspended until December 1999, at a special meeting of the executive of the Assemblies of God held at Sydney Airport.

At the time, Frank Houston’s son, Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston, was the national president of the Assemblies of God, now known as Australian Christian Churches.

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Allegations of abuse by Kiwi pastor heard by Aussie inquiry

NEW ZEALAND
TVNZ

[with video]

A New Zealand church leader has been identified as a serial child sex abuser at a royal commission in Australia.

But before moving to Australia, ONE News has uncovered that Frank Houston was investigated by the Assembly of God Church here for molesting young boys.

For more than a decade he headed the Assembly of God churches in New Zealand.

In the 1990s he was the focus of an internal church investigation into allegations of sexual abuse against young boys. A former church pastor claims that investigation was covered up.

Across the Tasman, Frank Houston’s son Brian has been centre stage at a Royal Commission of Inquiry into child sex abuse.

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‘Witchcraft’ Child Abuse: Met Police and Churches Unite for Special Awareness Event

UNITED KINGDOM
Yahoo! News

By Samantha Payne | IB Times

A pastor swinging a child and banging their head to drive out the devil is one of 27 “horrific” child abuse incidents “linked to belief” the Met Police has investigated over the past year, it has emerged.

Other examples of removing evil spirits include dunking children in a bath, forcing an infant to drink unknown substances and rubbing chilli peppers into a child’s eyes.

One case even involved parents removing their children from school to attend an exorcism ceremony in the country.

Out of the 27 investigations ranging from child neglect to sexual assault offences, two cases resulted in an arrest for rape and one being charged for rape.

“Abuse linked to belief is a horrific crime which is condemned by people of all cultures, communities and faiths. A number of high-profile investigations brought the issue of ritual abuse and witchcraft into the headlines but it is important that professionals are clear about the signs to look for,” said Terry Sharpe, detective superintendent from the Met’s Sexual Offences, Exploitation and Child Abuse Command.

The Met Police has launched a special conference today (8 October) at City Hall to raise awareness about ritual child abuse in partnership with the Churches’ Child Protection Advisory Service (CCPAS). Officers believe it is a crime kept hidden within families and faith communities, which can be prevented through better partnership working with the community.

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Ritual child abuse linked to witchcraft on the rise in the UK…

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Ritual child abuse linked to witchcraft on the rise in the UK: Drownings and rape part of ‘hidden crimes to drive out the devil’

By HARRIET ARKELL FOR MAILONLINE

Detectives are reporting a massive rise in the number of reported child abuse linked to witchcraft, they said today.

Scotland Yard has received 27 allegations of ritual child abuse this year alone – a dramatic increase on a decade ago, when just two such cases were reported to police in the whole of 2004.

Examples of the faith-based abuse include a child being dunked in a bath to ‘wash away evil spirits’, children being raped, and a pastor swinging a child around banging its head to ‘drive out the devil’.

Now teachers, social workers and doctors are to be taught to spot the signs of the abuse in a drive to tackle the growing problem across Britain.

Last month police were called to a leisure centre in south London after residents reported a string of dawn ‘child exorcisms’ in which adults surrounded a toddler chanting ‘Get the demon out’.

A number of child killings have been linked to these beliefs, including the murder of Kristy Bamu, 15, who was tortured and drowned by his sister and her boyfriend in 2010; and the death of Victoria Climbie.

The number of cases of ritualistic or faith-based abuse of children reported to Scotland Yard has increased year-on-year over the past decade. But detectives believe the number of reports is just the tip of the iceberg, with many more such cases being kept secret among communities.

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Hillsong founder met with church leaders ONE YEAR after…

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

Hillsong founder met with church leaders ONE YEAR after being told of sex abuse allegations against his father

By Louise Cheer for Daily Mail Australia and Aap

It took a year for Hillsong leader Brian Houston to meet with the Pentecostal church about allegations his father had molested a seven-year-old boy.

The meeting came 12 months after Pastor Barbara Taylor had raised with state executives of the Assemblies of God the matter of Frank Houston’s abuse of the boy in Sydney almost 30 years earlier.

It took place at the Qantas Club at Sydney Airport three days before Christmas 1999 and was called by Hillsong pastor Brian Houston who also informed church leaders he had stood his father down, an inquiry has heard on Wednesday.

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Houston revelation a Xmas ‘surprise’

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

BY ANNETTE BLACKWELL
October 8, 2014

The national executive of Australia’s Pentecostal movement knew nothing of complaints against preacher Frank Houston until his son called a special meeting to say he had stood his father down, an inquiry has heard.

The meeting, which took place at the Qantas Club at Sydney Airport three days before Christmas 1999, was called by Hillsong pastor Brian Houston.

At the time he was national president of the Assemblies of God – a confederation of about 1000 evangelical churches.

It took place more than one year after Pastor Barbara Taylor had raised with state executives of the AoG the matter of Frank Houston’s abuse of a seven-year-old boy in Sydney almost 30 years earlier.

Keith Ainge, former national secretary of AoG in Australia, has told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Brian Houston reported at the meeting his father had admitted to a sexual act with a minor.

Pastor Ainge said he and the others “knew nothing of the complaints against Frank Houston” until the December 1999 meeting.

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Hillsong leader speaks of ‘painful’ abuse allegations against his father Frank Houston

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

by Nicole Chettle
Updated 8 Oct 2014

The head of the Hillsong Church says his heart breaks for the victims of child abuse perpetrated by his father, the late preacher Frank Houston.

Senior Pastor Brian Houston spoke outside a Sydney hearing of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The commission is examining the handling of allegations against Brian Houston’s father William Francis Houston, better known as Frank.

It has heard Frank Houston admitted to the abuse, which took place in Australia and New Zealand several decades ago.

“They’re true allegations, mainly, and so it’s painful,” he said.

“It’s been painful for 15 years.

“But you know I also understand my pain’s nothing compared to someone who been molested or sexually abused by a paedophile, by a predator.”

Brian Houston again refuted claims, heard before the royal commission yesterday, that he told an abuse victim they were to blame for “tempting” his father.

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Files released of Winona area priests with child sex abuse allegations

MINNESOTA
News 8000

[with video]

Author: Brittany Schmidt, bschmidt@wkbt.com

ROCHESTER, Minn. (WKBT) –
New documents were released Tuesday morning pertaining to the 14 priests from the Catholic Diocese of Winona who have been accused of child sexual abuse.

The child sexual abuse accusations date all the way back to the 1960s. Of the 14 priests accused, nine have died, three have been defrocked, or removed from priesthood, one is pending removal and one has been deported to India.

Sexual abuse survivors, attorney Jeff Anderson and a former priest and advocate, Patrick J. Wall, gathered in Rochester to release the files of the 14 priests.

One victim said although some may never be punished, what they have done lives on and he wants to make sure it ends here.

“Why do I need to be here? Because this needs to stop,” said Paul Hotchkiss, a victim of child sexual abuse by a priest in the Diocese of Winona.

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Pacelli High School fires math teacher after sex arrest

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

[with video]

posted by Shelby Capacio

AUSTIN, Minn. (KMSP) – On Tuesday, Pacelli Catholic Schools announced the high school’s math teacher has been terminated following her arrest in a criminal sexual conduct investigation involving a minor.

Administrators at Pacelli High School say they are cooperating with law enforcement in the case against 28-year-old Mary Gilles, and will continue to help if and when prosecution begins. Apparently, a Monday morning phone call reported suspicious activity that lead to her arrest. Leaders at the diocese say that arrest was made because Pacelli Catholic Schools adopted procedures and a protocol for identifying sexual abuse and immediately reporting suspicious activity to police.

“Our prayers go out to those who have suffered child sexual abuse and who have been harmed,” a statement from the Diocese of Winona read in part. “We encourage anyone with information regarding child sexual abuse to immediately report that information to law enforcement and we remain committed to protect all God’s children.”

Gilles is charged with third-degree criminal sexual contact and was arrested Monday at her apartment, which is located half a mile from the Catholic high school. Officials with the Diocese of Winona confirmed that the victim is a male student at Pacelli High School, but no further information was released.

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Charges: Emails revealed Pacelli teacher’s ‘sexual relationship’ with teen student

MINNESOTA
Austin Daily Herald

A former Pacelli High School teacher allegedly had a sexual relationship with one of her students.

Mary Gilles, 28, was charged Tuesday with six counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct after she allegedly slept with a 17-year-old student several times.

According to a court complaint, a Pacelli staffer saw Gilles and the victim alone in the school auditorium late last Friday. A Pacelli administrator told police she had a “gut feeling” about the two and searched the victim’s school email account. She found a password for the student’s personal email, where staff discovered “numerous emails containing sexual relationship content.”

Detectives reviewed the emails between the victim and Gilles, some of which revealed Gilles could be pregnant.

The victim and Gilles told police they had slept together four or five times between February and June, and continued to have sex in September, according to the complaint.

Gilles was arrested at her home Monday and was suspended from teaching. She was fired Tuesday. She had taught high school math.

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Man Suing Newark Archdiocese Over Alleged Sexual Abuse

NEW JERSEY
CBS New York

TRENTON, N.J. (CBSNewYork/AP) – A northern New Jersey man is suing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark, alleging that a now-deceased priest sexually molested him more than 30 years ago.

Stephen Marlowe, of Hoboken, discussed his claims during a news conference Tuesday in Trenton. The suit was filed last month in state Superior Court.

Marlowe and members a sexual-assault victims advocacy group called for passage of a state Senate measure aimed at rolling back the state’s two-year statute of limitations in civil suits involving sex assault.

Marlowe says he supports the bill in part because he’s concerned his case could be dismissed due to the statute. He first came forward in 2010.

A spokesman says the Archdiocese doesn’t comment on pending litigation.

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Kieran Conry Says “Celibacy Just Means Not Getting Married”

UNITED STATES
Standing on My Head

Fr. Dwight Longenecker

In this article in the UK’s Guardian paper former Catholic Bishop Kieran Conry confirms what I suspected all along: that his understanding of celibacy is simply that the priest promises not to be married.

Conry said celibacy was not about sex but marriage. “When a priest makes a promise of celibacy, he promises to remain unmarried, that’s all. Then the ordinary rules of morality apply,” he said.

Is it possible that a man becomes a bishop so profoundly and willfully misinterprets this basic understanding of the vow of celibacy?

This is why he did not publicly apologize for the sin of fornication or adultery but simply that the vague admission that he was “unfaithful to his vows as a priest.”

Here’s how it works for priests and bishops like Kieran Conry: the vow of celibacy means he doesn’t get married.

Therefore it’s okay to have a long term mistress. Its okay to have a series of sexual relationships and affairs. Indeed, it seems that it is okay to commit adultery. This is why liberal priests and bishops like Kieran Conry go on to abuse women, young men and even children. Anybody is game. You just can’t get married that’s all.

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Bankruptcy could help Winona diocese avoid sex abuse lawsuits

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Martin Moylan St. Paul, Minn.
Oct 7, 2014

If the Diocese of Winona files for bankruptcy as Bishop John Michael Quinn warned the Vatican in March, it could help the diocese negotiate its growing liability from monetary awards in clergy sex abuse lawsuits.

A bankruptcy filing would make the Winona diocese the first in the state — and at least the 12th in the nation — to seek bankruptcy protection.

Timeline: U.S. Catholic dioceses and bankruptcy

A contemplation of bankruptcy is not surprising for the diocese, said Temple University law professor Jonathan Lipson, who has studied Catholic Church bankruptcies.

“So many dioceses have found that bankruptcy is an effective way, or could be an effective way,

A bankruptcy would freeze litigation against the church, including upcoming lawsuits involving sexual abuse. Its consideration was revealed in the thousands of pages of Catholic Church documents that Jeff Anderson, an attorney representing alleged victims of clergy sex abuse, released Tuesday, as part of one such case.

Among them was a draft letter to the Vatican from this past March from Winona Bishop John Michael Quinn.

In the letter, Quinn writes that the diocese anticipates existing and future sexual abuse lawsuits against priests will lead to bankruptcy.

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Files of 14 Diocese of Winona priests accused of child sex abuse released

MINNESOTA
KTTC

[with video]

ROCHESTER, Minn. (KTTC) — The files of 14 Diocese of Winona priests accused of child sex abuse were made public during a news conference Tuesday in Rochester.

Joining attorney Jeff Anderson at the news conference was Paul Hotchkiss. Hotchkiss said he was abused by former priest Thomas Adamson. Adamson, a native of Byron, was ordained a priest in 1958 and got his first assignment in Winona with pastoral duties at St. Casimir’s Parish.
Adamson was removed from ministry in 1985 and defrocked in 2009.

Anderson said the documents have been looked over extensively in order to protect the identities of the survivors.

In a statement released Tuesday afternoon, Winona Bishop John Quinn said the diocese voluntarily released summaries of each of the files in June that were publicly disclosed Tuesday morning. The diocese said nearly all of the child sexual abuse committed by clergy occurred in the 1960’s and 1970’s. Of the fourteen priests who have sexually abused minors, nine priests are deceased, three priests have been laicized, one has laicization proceedings pending and one priest has been deported to Nellore, India with proceedings pending in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The diocese said no priests in the active ministry within in the Diocese of Winona have had credible accusations of child sexual abuse.

“The details of the sexual abuse contained in the files are painful reminders of the significant impact that sexual abuse has on the survivors of child sexual abuse,” the statement read. “Since the adoption of the Charter for the Protection of Youth and Young Persons in 2002, the Diocese of Winona has worked diligently in ensuring compliance with the Charter.”

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Amid a landscape of allegations and abuse, Winona diocese shows change

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

By Jerome Christenson

For the Catholic Church in Winona, it may not be over – but perhaps it is changing.

At 2:22 p.m. Tuesday, hours after the personnel files of 14 priests “credibly accused” of sexual misconduct were made public, the Diocese of Winona issued an official statement: “Pacelli Catholic Schools today, terminated the employment of Ms. Mary Gilles, who served as a high school math teacher at Pacelli High School (Austin, Minn.). Ms. Gilles has been arrested for suspicion of criminal sexual conduct involving a minor child.”

The case of Gilles, who faces charges of sexually assaulting a minor child, has just begun. But the diocese’s involvement so far mirrors other recent behavior by the diocese in response to claims of abuse, as the diocese prepares to fight a high-profile suit headed to trial in November and readies itself for other claims that Quinn has suggested may raise the possibility of the diocese considering bankruptcy.

Sixteen months earlier, Bishop John Quinn put one of the 14 priests, Rev. Leo Charles Koppala, on administrative leave and barred him from public ministry and all church property the same day charges of criminal sexual conduct with a minor child were filed against him in Faribault County. Koppala pleaded guilty in March and was deported to India in May with the assent and cooperation of local church officials, including a recommendation that he be removed from the priesthood.

Church officials’ reaction to the charges against Koppala are detailed in the internal diocesan documents and correspondence released Tuesday by Anderson & Associates, which is pursuing a wide-ranging suit against both the diocese and Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis, and evidences a dramatically changed approach to sexual misconduct by church employees.

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DIOCESE OF WINONA DOCUMENT RELEASE

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson and Associates

PRIEST FILES

Thomas P. Adamson File Part 1 Timeline
Thomas P. Adamson File Part 2
Thomas P. Adamson File Part 3
Sylvester F. Brown File Timeline
Joseph C. Cashman File Timeline
Louis G. Cook File Timeline
William D. Curtis File Timeline
John R. Feiten Timeline
Richard E. Hatch File Timeline
Ferdinand L. Kaiser File Timeline
Leo C. Koppala File Timeline
Jack L. Krough File Timeline
Michael J. Kuisle File Timeline
James W. Lennon File Timeline
Leland J. Smith File Timeline
Robert H. Taylor File Part 1 Timeline
Robert H. Taylor File Part 2

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Priest faces sentencing in child endangerment case

NEW YORK
Albany Times Union

A Niskayuna priest who carried on a seven-month relationship with a 15-year-old girl and admitted he endangered the minor is scheduled to be sentenced Wednesday in Clifton Park Town Court.

The Rev. James Michael Taylor is not expected to spend time behind bars.

In August, Taylor, who was serving as an associate pastor at St. Kateri Tekakwitha Parish in Niskayuna, pleaded guilty to endangering the welfare of a child, a misdemeanor that carries no more than a year in jail,

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‘No reason’ to make Hillsong abuse public, churches told

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

OCTOBER 08, 2014

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

THE Pentecostal Christian movement led by Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston told its ministers “we cannot see any reason” for the serial child abuse committed by his father to be publicly announced, a royal commission has heard.

A letter sent on Christmas Eve 2001 to every minister of the Assemblies of God in Australia movement said “We are aware that the above information may be a surprise and shock to some of you.

“We cannot see any reason for this to be announced to your church or further afield. Sadly there are always one or two people with their own agendas who will try and get mileage from other people’s pain,” the letter said.

The letter, tendered in evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, does not detail the offences committed by Brian Houston’s father, William Francis ‘Frank’ Houston.

Brian Houston, the then national president of the Assemblies of God, had received “a serious allegation” about his father in 1999, the letter said. The commission has heard this was that Frank Houston had sexually abused a seven-year-old boy decades before, which the older man subsequently admitted.

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Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Hillsong Church founder Brian Houston told Pastor he would stand down his father after abuse allegations arose

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 08, 2014

THE father of the founder of the Hillsong Church cried bucket loads of “crocodile tears” when he finally spoke to the man who he had sexually assaulted as a seven-year-old, the child sex abuse royal commission was told today.

Barbara Taylor, a minister of the Emmanuel Christian Family Church, said the victim had told her he had not believed Frank Houston’s tears were real.

The commission has also been told that a week after Brian Houston, founder of the Hillsong Church and former national president of the Pentecostal movement’s Australian Christian Churches, said he would sack his father in 1999, Frank Houston was allegedly still preaching on morning television and was on Hillsong brochures.

Pastor Taylor said she was told that Pastor Frank had still been preaching in Canberra.

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Man sues Newark Archdiocese over alleged sex abuse

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey 101.5

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A northern New Jersey man is suing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of

Stephen Marlowe, of Hoboken, discussed his claims during a news conference Tuesday on the steps of the Statehouse in Trenton. The suit was filed last month in state Superior Court.

Marlowe and members a sexual-assault victims advocacy group called for passage of a state Senate measure aimed at rolling back the state’s two-year statute of limitations in civil suits involving sex assault.

Marlowe says he supports the bill in part because he’s concerned his case could be dismissed due to the statute. He first came forward in 2010.

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Hoboken man sues Newark Archdiocese over alleged sex abuse

NEW JERSEY
The Record

OCTOBER 7, 2014

BY LINH TAT
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

TRENTON – A man suing a Catholic parish in Rutherford and the Archdiocese of Newark alleging that he was sexually abused by a priest identified himself publicly Tuesday, saying he decided to come forward to pressure lawmakers into ending the statute of limitations on civil cases stemming from such assaults.

Stephen Marlowe, 48, of Hoboken, said he was 12 and an altar boy at St. Mary’s Church in Rutherford when he was abused by the Rev. David A. Ernst and struggled for years with the decision to come forward with his accusations.

Ernst, who died in 1988, had also served in parishes in Wyckoff and Ridgefield Park and was among nine priests accused of sexually abusing children who were included in a $1 million settlement by the Archdiocese in 2004.

A woman at St. Mary’s Church referred media inquiries to the Archdiocese. There, a spokesman said he could not comment on the case because it is in litigation.

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St. Thomas officials did not know of priest sex abuse allegations, report says

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/07/2014

The University of St. Thomas has completed its investigation into sexual abuse allegations against former professor the Rev. Michael Keating but insists that before a lawsuit filed last October, neither the current nor former president knew of the allegations, according to a statement Tuesday.

Top officials also were unaware of recommendations the Clergy Review Board made in 2007 regarding suggested supervision of Keating — which included that he “be restricted in activities in the nature of retreats, spiritual counseling or mentoring, particularly of adolescents or young adults,” said university President Julie Sullivan.

Keating has denied that he sexually abused any minor.

Tuesday’s statement, emailed to all faculty, staff and students and obtained by the Pioneer Press, said an outside law firm had completed an independent investigation whose results were “confidential.”

But among several conclusions Sullivan disclosed was the lack of reported knowledge about Keating’s alleged behavior toward young girls.

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October 7, 2014

Univ. of St. Thomas: Officials unaware of Keating sex abuse claim

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Oct 7, 2014

A private investigation funded by the University of St. Thomas has determined that top university officials did not know about an abuse allegation against the Rev. Michael Keating, a priest of the Twin Cities archdiocese who resigned from his teaching job at the university in September.

In an email sent Tuesday to members of the St. Thomas community by university president Julie Sullivan said:

• Prior to October 2013, neither I, President Emeritus Father Dennis Dease, nor any of our current or former direct reports, were aware that allegations of sexual abuse or inappropriate conduct had been made against Father Keating. We also were not aware of the Clergy Review Board recommendations or any restrictions regarding his activities. Moreover, no university employees who had authority to make decisions regarding restrictions or conditions on Father Keating’s activities at the university were aware of the allegations or of any recommendations or restrictions.

• The university has not received any complaints of, and is not aware of any unreported allegations of, sexual misconduct against Father Keating during his time at the university.

• The university has not received any complaints of, and is not aware of any unreported allegations of, sexual misconduct against other members of the clergy currently or previously working at St. Thomas that have not been promptly reviewed and addressed by the university.

• St. Thomas has a robust program for the reporting and handling of allegations of sexual misconduct. Our priority is to ensure that everyone in our community clearly understands their responsibility to report concerns and allegations of sexual misconduct and abuse.

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