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 3, 2014

New Jersey diocese pays $610K to settle priest sex abuse lawsuit

NEW JERSEY
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 03, 2014

TRENTON, New Jersey — The Trenton Diocese has paid $610,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by a New Jersey man who said he was sexually abused for years as a teen by a priest who headed the diocese’s youth group.

Forty-two-year-old Chris Naples of Bass River Township claimed church leaders allowed the Rev. Terence McAlinden to remain in the ministry for 15 years after paying a settlement to another man.

The diocese suspended McAlinden in 2007 after it found Naples’ claims to be credible.

Under terms of the settlement, the diocese denies culpability.

Naples tells NJ Advance Media (http://bit.ly/1pw9VYi ) he was assured Bishop David O’Connell would issue a written apology in the diocese’s newspaper.

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.

Francis: The Pope’s calling

ROME
BBC News

With leaders of the Catholic Church about to gather in the Vatican to consider the future of the Church’s teaching on the family, the BBC’s director of news and current affairs, James Harding, asks whether Pope Francis is the moderniser progressives hope for, or an orthodox pontiff with a personal touch.

Just over a year ago, a phone rang in the offices of La Repubblica – Italy’s main centre-left newspaper. Stella Somma, personal assistant to the editor, answered.

The man at the end of the line said he would like to speak to Eugenio Scalfari, the founder and former editor of the paper, a 90-year-old atheist, and a hero of the secular left.

“Who’s speaking?” Stella asked. “Papa Francesco,” the man said.

“Ah, the Pope,” Stella replied – and put the call through to Scalfari. “Listen, I have the Pope on the line.”

Scalfari picked up the phone at home and told Stella: “You’re crazy, it must be a joke.”

“No, it’s not a joke, I can’t make the Pope wait, so let me put you through.”

Scalfari remembers a voice saying, “‘Good morning, this is Pope Francis… you asked me for a meeting, and I want to do that. Let’s fix a date.’ And with the phone on his ear, he tells me, ‘Wednesday I can’t. Maybe Monday? Is that OK for you?’ And I told him: ‘Any day is fine for me. Monday is fine.'”

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Taped Deposition Reveals Cupich Getting Grilled by Lawyers

WASHINGTON
NBC Chicago

By Phil Rogers

Bishop Blasé Cupich has at least one strong tie to Spokane, which will tug him back to the Pacific Northwest, even after he assumes his new role as Chicago’s new Archbishop. He’s a witness in a court case.

Cupich is actually the plaintiff in a case in which he filed suit against his own law firm, Paine Hamblen, alleging malpractice. The firm, longtime attorneys for the Catholic Diocese of Spokane, managed the bankruptcy case for the Church, prompted by tens of millions of dollars in claims alleging sexual abuse.

That bankruptcy was a first for the Catholic Church in America, a court action taken when the Spokane Diocese faced over $70 million in claims, with only about $10 million in assets.

“We did a very good job,” says Jane Brown, the law firm’s managing partner. “We were able to bring the Diocese through that whole experience, managing its liabilities, and able to continue to ministry and promote healing.”

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Complaints Filed Against Four Minnesota Priests Accusing them of Sexual Abuse

MINNESOTA
KSTP

By: Megan Matthews

Noaker Law Firm has filed complaints against four Minnesota priests, who are all deceased, accusing them of sexually abusing kids.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said this is the first time the church has heard of an accusation against Ramon Buckley, who died 15 years ago. The church said John McGrath was removed from ministry in 1995 after investigating credible claims of abuse.
Statement Regarding Buckley and McGrath

The Diocese of New Ulm says it met with parishioners back in 1993 regarding a claim against Michael Skoblik. The Diocese also acknowledged the claim against William Marks filed Thursday but did not comment about him or the suit against him.

You can read the three complaints filed Thursday below:
Complaint on Behalf of John Doe 114
Complaint on Behalf of John Doe 115
Complaint on Behalf of John Doe 116

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Ex-student describes sexual abuse on trip to Lake Viking with KC area priest

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

BY JUDY L. THOMAS
THE KANSAS CITY STAR
10/02/2014

A former student at Nativity of Mary School in Independence told jurors Thursday that he and a friend endured sexual abuse on a weekend excursion with Monsignor Thomas O’Brien in 1983.

When the boys got home and told their parents, one father reported it to the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City St.-Joseph and met with then-Bishop John J. Sullivan, according to testimony presented to the Jackson County jury. But those families had no idea at the time that the priest who groped the boys and stripped naked on a bed in front of them had been reported to the diocese multiple times over the previous 20 years.

“To this day,” attorney Pedro Irigonegaray asked Darren Wahwassuck, “has a single representative of the Catholic diocese contacted you to say, ‘I’m sorry’?”

“No, sir,” Wahwassuck replied.

Jurors heard the fourth day of testimony in a civil trial involving Jon David Couzens, a former altar boy who says O’Brien sexually abused him in the early 1980s. Couzens claims the diocese was told repeatedly that O’Brien was a danger to children but failed to prevent the abuse.

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

Five witnesses testified Thursday, including a former Nativity teacher and a clinical psychologist who evaluated Couzens.

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.

Vatican trial for abuse suspect undercuts zero-tolerance goal

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

Editorial

POPE FRANCIS sounds genuinely contrite for the sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy, and he has promised that those responsible will be called to account . Yet as an institution, the church still seems stuck in the habit of protecting clergy members from secular criminal justice systems.

In certain ways, the church has been moving more swiftly than usual in response to the troubling case of the Vatican’s former ambassador to the Dominican Republic, Jozef Wesolowski, who was accused of sexually molesting boys in the island nation. When the accusations reached the Vatican in August of 2013, Wesolowski was quickly yet quietly recalled to Rome, and a church tribunal defrocked him in June of this year. Wesolowski became the highest-ranking Vatican official ever to be found guilty of sex abuse under canon law.

Even so, he apparently remained a free man; he has been seen strolling around Rome, according to a troubling New York Times report in August. The newspaper detailed the allegations of sexual crimes by Wesolowski in the Dominican Republic, where he arrived as nuncio in 2008; his young victims say Wesolowski paid them for sexual favors. Aggravating the situation, it seemed that the 66-year-old former nuncio had retained his diplomatic immunity even after being defrocked. That is, until the Vatican eventually released a statement saying Wesolowski did not have that protection anymore.

Then, late last month, the church announced Wesolowski’s arrest as a separate Vatican criminal court held a hearing on his case. Beyond charges of sexual abuse, he was also accused of having child pornography. If found guilty — after Pope Francis’ revision of the Vatican law regarding sexual abuse in 2013, Wesolowski can be sentenced to up to 12 years in prison — the former ambassador would be the highest-ranking church official to be convicted. And it would be only the second major case in recent memory, after Paolo Gabriele, Pope Benedict’s former butler, was sent to Vatican prison on charges of aggravated theft.

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Oregon pastor allegedly touched, sexted Utah teen

UTAH
The Salt Lake Tribune

By Michael McFall | The Salt Lake Tribune

First Published Oct 02 2014

South Salt Lake police have arrested an Oregon pastor for allegedly sexting and touching a 15-year-old.

Police arrested Leonel Rocha-Pereda, 66, on Wednesday morning on suspicion of sexually abusing a minor, enticing a minor over the Internet and sexual exploitation of a minor. As of Thursday afternoon, he had not been formally charged in 3rd District Court.

Rocha-Pereda, of Salem, Ore., had been e-mailing the girl since July, and in mid-September, made a trip to Salt Lake City to start a new church, according to a police news release.

The girl told police that the man was the pastor of her church.

The girl’s family knew Rocha-Pereda from when they used to live in Oregon and invited him to stay at their South Salt Lake home, said police spokesman Gary Keller.

“During the time the suspect was in Salt Lake he [allegedly] grabbed the victim’s breasts and groin on two separate occasions,” the release reads. The alleged touching occurred at the girl’s home and at a local mall, police say.

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 sexual abuse victims urge other Tasmanians to speak to royal commission

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY TYSON SHINE
October 3, 2014

Two Tasmanian men who have appeared before the royal commission into child sexual abuse are urging others to come forward.

The men say they were victims of historic child sexual abuse at St Virgil’s school in Hobart in the 1950s.

They want to convince witnesses to come forward to the Federal Government’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Sexual Abuse.

Tasmania remains the only state or territory where the commission has not held an open session, but it plans to return and take formal evidence in an open hearing before the end of the year.

The ABC’s 7.30 Tasmania spoke with two victims who spoke to the commission in private sessions about paedophile Christian Brother Patrick Timothy Farrell, who taught at the college in the 1950s.

Brother Farrell was the head of the junior dormitory where the sexual assaults took place.

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.

Cameron Tully jailed for 14 years for child sexual offences

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Elizabeth Byrne
Updated 3 Oct 2014

A man who sexually abused eight young girls who attended his family’s home church in Canberra has been jailed for 14 years.

Cameron Flynn Tully, 40, was found guilty of 18 counts of sexual assault, ranging from rape to acts on indecency, after a trial in June.

Sentencing Tully, Justice John Burns described the abuse as “brazen, revealing an arrogant belief that your victims would not report the crimes, and if they did would not be believed”.

The crimes were committed in the 1990s and early 2000s at his family’s farm in Cook where he would mind the children of people attending meetings, including home church.

Justice Burns said it was clear the abuse was a pattern of behaviour that continued over about 10 years and was not a single isolated event.

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Polish bishops urge legislators not to ratify European pact on violence against women

POLAND
Catholic Herald (UK)

By JONATHAN LUXMOORE on Friday, 3 October 2014

Polish Catholic leaders urged legislators not to ratify an international convention combating violence against women, claiming some of its clauses violate Catholic teaching.

The Family Affairs Council of the Polish bishops’ conference said: “This convention is not directed at countering violence, as its title suggests, but at imposing an ideological cultural revolution. It seeks to redefine sex as an alterable social phenomenon, rather than a biological one, and to blame the foundational communities of marriage and family for all violence.”

The statement was issued on October 2 as Polish members of Parliament prepared to debate ratification of the Council of Europe’s “Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence Against Women and Domestic Violence.”

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NSW Police Integrity Commission examines informal agreements between Catholic church and abuse investigators

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By GABRIEL WINGATE-PEARSE Oct. 3, 2014

THE Police Integrity Commission has taken up the issue of informal agreements between NSW Police and the Catholic Church which allowed the church to withhold the results of internal investigations of abuse.

The Commission released a notice on Friday announcing Operation Protea with a public hearing to be held on Monday October 13.

The general scope and purpose of the hearing will be, firstly, to investigate whether there was any police misconduct involved in the participation of a police officer in the Catholic Church Professional Standards Resource Group between 1998 and 2005.

Secondly, it will investigate police involvement in any ‘‘agreement, protocol or Memorandum of Understanding’’ between police and the Catholic Church concerning the handling of complaints of abuse by Catholic Church personnel or employees.

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Analysis: Operation Protea is a welcome move by the NSW Police watchdog

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Suzanne Smith
Updated 3 Oct 2014

The announcement today that the Police Integrity Commission (PIC) in NSW will hold a public hearing as part of Operation Protea – an investigation into the relationship and agreements between police and the Catholic Church – is a welcome move.

There should be absolute clarity as to whether these arrangements were appropriate or could be in contravention of section 316 of the NSW Crimes Act – which refers to concealment of crimes.

If there was no complicity between the organisations, that will be a welcome relief.

What needs to be cleared up is whether the Catholic Church, through tricky legal thinking, set up these arrangements so they could not be prosecuted under new mandatory reporting laws in NSW.

The Catholic Church argues it acted in good faith, and wanted these arrangement to ensure there was no risk to children in their care.

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NSW Police Integrity Commission opens inquiry into agreements between police and Catholic Church over handling of abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Emily Bourke
Updated 3 Oct 2014

The NSW Police Integrity Commission (PIC) has opened an investigation into agreements between the state’s police force and the Catholic Church which may have enabled the church to conceal information about child sexual abuse.

Last year, the ABC’s Lateline reported accusations that the church tried to strike a formal arrangement with police over how to handle abuse allegations and what information would be handed over for investigation.

There are questions over whether the memorandum of understanding was ever signed, approved or even in operation.

Operation Protea has now been set up to investigate such arrangements and whether there was any police misconduct between 1998 and 2005.

It will also look at the secondment of a senior police officer to an internal church committee which dealt with allegations of child abuse by clergy.

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Teen victim in sexual exploitation case says suspect was pastor of her church

UTAH
Fox 13

OCTOBER 2, 2014, BY MARK GREEN

SOUTH SALT LAKE, Utah – Police have arrested a man who allegedly sexually exploited a minor who said he is the pastor of her church.

Police stated they were contacted Wednesday by the parents of a 15-year-old girl, and the parents said their daughter had been exchanging messages of a sexual nature with a 66-year-old male.

The suspect was identified by police as 66-year-old Leonel Rocha-Preda of Salem, Oregon.

The victim told police the man was the pastor of her church and that she had been exchanging emails with him since July, according to a press release from South Salt Lake Police Department. The man came to Salt Lake City in mid-September to establish a new church in the Salt Lake City area, and he was invited to stay at the victim’s house at that time.

The release states that while he was in Salt Lake the man grabbed the victim’s breasts and groin on two separate occasions. The alleged touching occurred at the victim’s home and at a local mall.

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Pastor accused of sexually exploiting teen in congregation

UTAH
KSL

By McKenzie Romero

SOUTH SALT LAKE — An Oregon pastor who came to Utah in order to open a new church has been accused of sexually abusing a teenage girl in his congregation.

South Salt Lake police arrested Leonel Rocha-Pereda, 66, for investigation of sexual abuse of a minor, enticing a minor over the Internet and sexual exploitation of a minor.

The pastor from Salem, Oregon, reportedly began exchanging emails with the 15-year-old girl in July 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. He is also accused of touching the girl inappropriately in her home and at an area shopping mall.

The girl’s parents notified police, who interviewed Rocha-Pereda and arrested him Wednesday. Rocha-Pereda denies touching the girl inappropriately, according to police.

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Parents sue 2 churches after youth pastor solicits daughter

TEXAS
Houston Chronicle

By Anita Hassan | October 2, 2014

The parents of a teenage girl are suing two well-known Houston churches, claiming the organizations were negligent by employing a youth pastor who was convicted of sexually soliciting their daughter while working there.

According to the lawsuit, filed this week in Harris County, Second Baptist Church and Community of Faith Church were careless in their supervision and hiring of 35-year-old Chad Foster, a one-time youth pastor who pleaded guilty to trying to pressure the girl into having sex using the Internet in 2011.

Second Baptist and Community of Faith could not be reached for comment after hours Thursday.

Foster was part of a “marketing scheme” by Second Baptist that allowed youth pastors to encourage students in public schools to attend church activities and events, enticing them with fast food, the suit states. The goal was to recruit their parents to join. He later went to work for Community of Faith, the suit states.

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Family sues two churches, claims child was not protected from sex predator

TEXAS
Click to Houston

Author: Phillip Mena, Anchor/Reporter, pmena@kprc.com
Published On: Oct 02 2014

HOUSTON –
A family is suing two popular Houston churches, accusing them of failing to protect their daughter from a sexual predator working as a youth minister.

Second Baptist Church and Community of Faith were named in the lawsuit filed in a Harris County court earlier this week.

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit are the family of a teen girl who was allegedly victimized by Chad Foster, a former youth pastor for both Second Baptist and Community of Faith.

Foster admitted to making online sexual advances to the girl. He met at her school when she was 12 years old. He pleaded guilty to online solicitation of a minor. Foster also pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl he also met at school in his role as youth pastor. Foster is currently serving a five-year prison sentence.

The lawsuit claims Second Baptist Church didn’t train Foster to work with minors and knew about Foster’s sinister agenda.

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Police looking for more victims of man accused of sexually abusing baby sitter

OREGON
KATU

By Chelsea Kopta

PORTLAND, Ore. – Police are asking for help finding more potential victims of a man accused of sexually abusing a teenage boy who baby sat his children.

Joseph William Wehage, 39, has been charged with 11 felonies: seven counts of first-degree sodomy; two counts of second-degree attempted sodomy; one count of first-degree attempted sodomy; and one count of second-degree sodomy.

At his arraignment Thursday, Wehage pleaded not guilty to all charges. His attorney filed a motion to have him released on his own recognizance but it was denied. A judge set Wehage’s bail at $2,030,000.

Detectives began an investigation in August after they said Wehage sexually abused the teen who worked as a baby sitter for Wehage’s family. Police said Wehage met the teen through a church both families attended, Evergreen Presbyterian, located in Beaverton.

Police believe Wehage might have more potential victims as baby sitters.

KATU went to Wehage’s listed address in Oregon, an apartment in Southwest Portland, but no one was home. It also talked to the church’s senior pastor but he said Wehage was not a member of the church and did not want to provide any further details.

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Raped by his supervisor then convicted of buggery: life in a 70s boys’ home

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Helen Davidson
Friday 3 October 2014

In 1972 a 16-year-old resident of a Sydney boys’ home was charged with buggery after he tried to report to his carers that he had been raped by a supervisor at work.

Peter Solway says he was forced by the home’s administrator to lie to the police and confess to what was then a crime, or be transferred to a notoriously violent detention facility in Tamworth.

As New South Wales moves to join Victoria in allowing people to have their convictions for homosexuality expunged, Solway’s story serves to show how the conviction is often only part of the story, and the bill only one step towards making amends for damaged lives. …

In October 1971, aged 15, Solway was charged with being “uncontrollable” and sent to the Wright house at the Church of England Charlton boys’ home in the Sydney suburb of Ashfield, living

At least two of the four Charlton homes are now believed to have been places of physical and sexual abuse of young boys, for which the governing body of the Sydney diocese of the Anglican church issued an official apology in 2004.

Last year, 73-year-old, Albert John Abel, was sentenced to three years and four months in prison for attacking a 12-year-old boy he abused over several years at the Charlton home in Glebe.

Solway tells Guardian Australia that soon after arriving at Ashfield he and other boys were taken by Charlton’s executive officer, Ray Menzies, on a camping trip to Sydney’s Blue Mountains. Solway says he witnessed Menzies sexually abusing a boy there.

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Residential School Survivors Society celebrates 20th

CANADA
Williams Lake Tribune

by Monica Lamb-Yorski – Williams Lake Tribune
posted Oct 2, 2014

First Nations from surrounding communities and as far away as Bella Bella and Kitimat gathered Thursday at Sugar Cane to mark the 20th anniversary of the Residential School Survivors Society.

It was Williams Lake Indian Band’s turn to host the society’s AGM, which they marked with an elders’ tour, a community dinner, drumming and presentations.

The society provides education, workshops, art therapy, information sessions, health and support services. said finance administrator Christine Johnson who works out of the North Vancouver office and is originally from Alkali Lake.

Aside from North Vancouver there are offices in Williams Lake, Downtown Vancouver, Penticton, Kamloops and Terrace.

“We are still feeling the impacts of residential schools today,” said Chief Mike Archie of Canim Lake. “There’s a lot of history there but our strength will come in how we move forward.”

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National group blasts Syracuse diocese over child-molesting allegations against monsignor

NEW YORK
Post-Standard

By John O’Brien | jobrien@syracuse.com
on October 02, 2014

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A national victims’ advocacy organization today criticized the Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse over its handling of a child-molesting accusation against a monsignor.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests questioned why it took more than a year after receiving the allegations for the diocese to permanently remove Monsignor Charles Eckermann from ministry.

“Why on earth does it take a more than a year – and consultation with church bureaucrats in Rome – to determine whether a child sex abuse report against a New York priest is ‘credible’?”

“When officials move slowly and quietly in abuse cases, they break their promises to be ‘open and transparent,’ and they endanger other children,” Clohessy said. “Child abusers rarely abuse once. There is no telling how many more children might have needlessly been victimized.”

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Lawsuits allege abuse by four priests in Twin Cities Archdiocese, New Ulm

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: October 2, 2014

All of the Minnesota priests are now deceased.

Three lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse were filed Thursday against four Minnesota priests, including one priest whose name has not been previously linked to pedophilia.

One of the suits alleges that the Rev. Ramon Jerome Buckley, a new name in the sex abuse scandal rocking the Catholic Church, sexually abused an altar boy at Sacred Heart Parish in Robbinsdale during the late 1970s.

According to the suit filed against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Buckley sexually assaulted the boy in the parish office, including performing oral sex on him. The boy was between 12 and 14 years old, the suit says.

The suit, filed in Ramsey County District Court, alleges that when Buckley left the church and was replaced by the Rev. John McGrath, McGrath continued to abuse the boy for another two years. McGrath also had served in parishes in St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Both priests are deceased.

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October 2, 2014

Priests who served in St. Paul abused altar boy in Robbinsdale, lawsuit says

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/02/2014

A never-before-accused priest was sued Thursday by a man who claims the cleric sexually abused him while he was an altar boy at Sacred Heart parish in Robbinsdale.

The Rev. Ramon Jerome Buckley fondled the boy and forced him to have oral sex at the parish office, according to the lawsuit filed Thursday in Ramsey County District Court.

The abuse took place from about 1978 to 1979 when the boy was 12 to 14, according to the suit. In the same general time period, from 1978 to 1980, the same boy was the victim of abuse by a second priest at Sacred Heart, the Rev. John McGrath, the lawsuit claimed.

Following his time in Robbinsdale, Buckley worked as an associate priest at the Church of St. Mark in St. Paul from 1979 to 1982, according to the archdiocese. Buckley also served at Holy Cross in Minneapolis and St. Luke in Clearwater, Minn., the archdiocese said. He died in 1999.

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Deceased Robbinsdale priest accused of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Oct 2, 2014

A lawsuit filed Thursday in Ramsey County claims that the late Rev. Ramon Buckley sexually assaulted a boy at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Robbinsdale in the late 1970s.

The lawsuit, filed by attorney Patrick Noaker on behalf of an unnamed man, marks the first public allegation of sexual abuse against Buckley, a priest of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis who died in 1999. It accuses the archdiocese of negligence for allegedly failing to protect the boy from Buckley and another priest, the Rev. John McGrath, who served alongside Buckley at Sacred Heart.

Before his death in 1995, McGrath was accused of sexually abusing girls. Two women sued McGrath and the archdiocese in the early 1990s, and Archbishop John Nienstedt included McGrath on a list of “credibly accused” priests released in December 2013.

The lawsuits are allowed under a law passed in May 2013 that gives older victims of child sex abuse more time to sue. Minnesota law previously required sex abuse lawsuits to be filed before a victim turned 24. The Child Victims Act eliminated the statute of limitations for new cases of abuse and created a three-year window for older victims to file suit. The window expires in mid-2016. More than 30 clergy sex abuse lawsuits have been filed so far, according to attorneys at two law firms handling abuse cases.

According to the lawsuit filed Thursday, Buckley first abused the boy in about 1978 or 1979 at the Sacred Heart parish office when the boy was about 12. Buckley summoned the boy from class several times, Noaker said, and over about two years would sexually assault him and send him back to class.

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Maplewood pastor gets 24 years for raping 2 girls over years

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/02/2014

A Maplewood pastor was sentenced to 24 years in prison for raping two young girls over a period of several years.

Jacoby Kindred Sr., 62, insisted, as he had at trial, that he was innocent.

“I did nothing to those children,” he told Ramsey County District Judge Rosanne Nathanson on Thursday. “I never touched them.”

He said the sisters falsely accused him because their family was angry with his family.

A jury convicted Kindred on July 17 on two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, one for each victim. The older girl was about 6 or 7 when the abuse began, she testified.

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‘Pastor’ Gets 12-Year Sentence For Raping Girls

MINNEAPOLIS
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) –A 62-year-old Maplewood man and self-proclaimed pastor was sentenced Thursday to 12 years in prison for raping two young girls for almost a decade.

Jacoby Kindred was convicted on two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, and was given consecutive sentences of 144 months for each.

According to the criminal complaint, Kindred was considered the grandfather to his two victims, even though he was actually the father of their mother’s ex-boyfriend, and not a blood relative.

The victims — who are now both teenagers — would often sleep over at Kindred’s home beginning when they were both young girls.

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Reform group in Rome calls for family input at synod

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Oct. 2, 2014 NCR Today

ROME
Wearing pins declaring “families must have a vote in family synods,” a global group pushing for greater inclusivity in the church is meeting here this week in an effort to influence the Vatican’s upcoming global meeting of Catholic bishops.

The coalition, known as Catholic Church Reform International and claiming backing of like-minded groups around the world, is calling specifically for more ways for ordinary families to have input in the discussions at the meeting, known as a synod.

During a two-day conference Thursday and Friday held near the Pantheon, the group is calling on the synod and Pope Francis to “dialogue, dialogue, dialogue.”

“Dialogue with spouses, with parents, and with families of every kind,” it states in a press release. “Listen to them, learn from them, and trust their Spirit-led discernment by including them in the decision-making process.”

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Priest’s confession: I took money from Angel Fund

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free Press

Patricia Montemurri, Detroit Free Press Staff Writer October 2, 2014

Detroit Catholic priest Timothy Kane had a sexual relationship with a Michigan prison inmate, and embezzled money from the Archdiocese of Detroit’s Angel Fund charity to get money for the inmate and his family, according to a confession the priest made after his arrest.

Kane’s confession was read Thursday to a Wayne County Circuit Court jury by Detective Cory Williams, an investigator for the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office who arrested the priest at the St. Gregory the Great Catholic Church rectory in northwest Detroit on Feb. 6.

Kane waived his rights to remain silent after the arrest, Williams said.

Kane, 58, met the prisoner, Fonsha Reid, when Kane served as a prison chaplain about 14 years ago and they had a sexual relationship over the last three to four years, according to the confession. Reid was imprisoned for manslaughter from 1994 to March 2009 and then returned to prison for a felony firearm conviction from summer 2009 to mid-June 2014, according to state records.

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Burnsville man charged with sex crimes with two 13-year-old girls

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: KAREN ZAMORA Updated: October 2, 2014

The 23-year-old man met the girls online, picked them up in Andover and brought them to Burnsville home, charges say.

A 23-year-old Burnsville man is accused of sexual assault and kidnapping after bringing two 13-year-old Andover girls he met online to the basement of his parents’ home, according to charges filed Thursday in Anoka County.

Casey Lee Chinn was charged with six felonies — two counts of third degree criminal sexual conduct, two counts of kidnapping and two counts of solicitation

Authorities say Chinn met the girls through Omegle, a free online chat site, and picked them up around 7:30 Monday evening in Andover. Police, using clues gleaned from the girls’ electronic devices, tracked them to the Burnsville home Tuesday morning. …

On Tuesday, officials at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Minneapolis placed Chinn on leave from the part-time job as volleyball coach he began in September.

“We are cooperating fully with the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office and are encouraging our school families to discuss any interactions that their children may have had with Mr. Chinn and to come forward with any concerns,” the school said Tuesday.

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Man charged with sex, kidnapping crimes tied to Andover teens

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

A Burnsville man has been charged with six felonies, including kidnapping and sexual assault, in a case tied to two 13-year-old girls from Andover who were reported missing on Tuesday.

The complaint charges that Casey Lee Chin, 23, allegedly met the girls online through a website called Omegle, which encourages users to “talk to strangers.”

According to the Anoka County Attorney’s Office, Chinn contacted the girls online, picked them up in Andover Monday night and took them to his Burnsville home. He told them to use the back door and go to the basement because he lived with his parents. There, he allegedly sexually assaulted the girls.

Deputies were able to track Chinn’s location through computer forensics and arrested him early Tuesday morning. …

Chinn coached youth sports at Cristo Rey Jesuit High School in Minneapolis and East Ridge High School in Woodbury.

At East Ridge, Chinn was a volunteer baseball coach and had gone through a background check, the South Washington County Schools district said.

“We are extremely concerned to hear of this issue from our law enforcement community and will act swiftly and accordingly to ensure the safety and well-being of our students,” South Washington Superintendent Keith Jacobus said in a statement.

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Vatican: Child molestation allegation against former Bishop Ludden principal ‘credible’

NEW YORK
CNY Central

SYRACUSE — The Vatican says a child molestation claim against a Catholic monsignor and former Bishop Ludden High School principal is “credible,” according to the Syracuse Roman Catholic Diocese.

83-year-old Monsignor Charles Eckermann was removed from ministry in April after the accusations of rape from a former altar boy were considered credible. The alleged rape happened 25 years ago.

The Vatican confirmed the finding today, according to the Syracuse Diocese.

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Vatican…

NEW YORK
WSYR

Vatican: Child molestation claims against former priest of the Syracuse Diocese are credible

Syracuse (WSYR-TV) – Vatican officials have confirmed that child molestation accusations against a decorated former priest of the Syracuse Diocese are credible, officials say.

Charles Eckermann, who was designated with the title “Monsignor,” was suspended in April when a Diocesan review board determined that accusations are credible, a spokesperson for the Syracuse Diocese confirmed on Thursday.

The accusations stem from an incident that allegedly occurred 25 years ago.

Eckermann was a priest at St. Ann’s in Manlius and served as a principal at Bishop Ludden High School.

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Man accused of sex crimes against boy babysitter

OREGON
KOIN

By Brent Weisberg

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN 6) — A 39-year-old man is accused of sexually abusing a young boy who was supposed to be the family’s babysitter, police said.

Joseph William Wehage pleaded not guilty Thursday morning to a secret grand jury indictment charging him with seven counts of first-degree sexual abuse, two counts of attempted second-degree sodomy, and one count each of second-degree sodomy and attempted first-degree sodomy.

Detective Jason Christensen, who is assigned to the Portland Police Bureau’s Sex Crimes Unit, opened the investigation in August 2014 after police learned about the case through a mandatory reporter.

Wehage sexually abused the boy from 2012-2013 at an apartment in the 5000 block of Southeast Beaverton Hillsdale Highway in SW Portland, police said. Wehage, the victim and the victim’s family all met through a local church. Police declined to release the church’s name because Wehage was not part of the clergy or its administration.

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OR–Police withhold name of church in abuse case

OREGON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 2

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 )

We are very disappointed that Portland police officials are withholding the name of a church where an accused child molester met his victim.

[KOIN]

Whether or not Joseph William Wehage had a formal leadership role at the church is irrelevant. It’s very possible that he assaulted others who attend or work at the church or their children.

Parents, parishioners and the public need and deserve more information, not less, about credibly accused child molesters. Withholding the church’s name smacks of the outdated deference that law enforcement officials once routinely gave to church officials but which, thankfully, has waned because of thousands of well-documented cases of clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

We urge Portland police officials to reconsider this timid and misguided decision.

(SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is the world’s oldest and largest support group for clergy abuse victims. We’ve been around for 25 years and have more than 18,000 members. Despite the word “priest” in our title, we have members who were molested by religious figures of all denominations, including nuns, rabbis, bishops, and Protestant ministers. Our website is SNAPnetwork.org)

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N.J. diocese pays $610K to settle claim it allowed sexually abusive priest to remain in ministry

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Mark Mueller | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on October 02, 2014

In what is believed to be one of New Jersey’s largest individual settlements involving sexual abuse by a priest, the Diocese of Trenton has paid $610,000 to a Burlington County man who says he was molested for more than a decade by the former head of the diocese’s youth group.

Chris Naples, 42, of New Gretna, filed suit against the diocese in March, alleging church leaders allowed the Rev. Terence McAlinden to remain in ministry for 15 years after quietly paying a settlement to another alleged victim.

It wasn’t until 2007, when Naples publicly accused McAlinden, that the diocese suspended the priest. A church investigation at the time found Naples’ claims to be credible.

Had the diocese acted on the earlier allegation, Naples says, his own abuse would have not lasted as long. He alleges McAlinden molested him hundreds of times in the late 1980s and 1990s, beginning when Naples was 13.

In recent years, a third alleged victim also has come forward, saying McAlinden repeatedly sexually assaulted him in the 1960s at the priest’s first assignment, Our Lady of Victories Church in Sayreville. The diocese settled with the man in 2012.

Naples, who reached agreement with the diocese in August after months of mediation, said in an interview the settlement is less about the money than the message it sends.

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HIA: RUC knew about sexual abuse at Rubane House

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The RUC and state agencies knew about sexual abuse at a boys’ home in County Down, in 1964, an abuse inquiry has heard.

They were alerted after a 14-year-old boy was abused by a De La Salle brother at Rubane House.

The details were revealed at the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry.

A total of 13 Northern Ireland institutions are being investigated.

On Thursday, the inquiry heard that the order removed the perpetrator from the home and he was eventually expelled from the order.

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MN- Victims sue 4 priests, one for the first time; SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 02, 2014

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

Attorneys for child sex abuse victims have filed new clergy sex abuse and cover up lawsuits regarding four Minnesota priests, one of whom has never been publicly accused before. We applaud the brave victims who broke their silence and are working towards justice.

The new lawsuits name four alleged child molesting priests from the Twin Cities archdiocese and New Ulm; Fr. Ramon J. Buckley (who has never been publicly exposed by the church), Fr. William Marks, Fr. John McGrath, and Fr. Michael Skoblik.

Many assume virtually all of the Twin Cities predator priests have been ‘outed.’ Today’s case against Fr. Buckley shows that this just isn’t true. There could be a dozen or more child molesting clerics who are still ‘under the radar.’ Exposing them and protecting kids should not be the burden of their victims. Hundreds of Catholic church staff and members – current and former – should stop being cowards and start speaking up about these dangerous clerics.

We urge church officials to reach out to anyone who may have been hurt by any of these clerics. We hope anyone who saw, suspects, or suffered clergy sex crimes will gain courage from these brave survivors and report what they know to secular officials.

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NY- Catholic monsignor removed for child abuse, SNAP responds

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 02, 2014

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

A New York monsignor was removed from ministry by the Diocese Syracuse in April after allegations of decades old child sexual abuse surfaced. The Vatican has now upheld his removal. We are disappointed by the Vatican and the diocese for moving slowly with this allegation.

Allegations of child sexual abuse were reported to the diocese in February of 2013. But Monsignor Charles Eckermann was not removed until April of 2014, which the Vatican confirmed today.

Why on earth do Catholic officials take more than a year to suspend an accused child molesting cleric? And why on earth does it take a more than a year – and consultation with church bureaucrats in Rome – to determine whether a child sex abuse report against a New York priest is ‘credible’?

We challenge Catholic officials to explain their delay. When officials more slowly and quietly in abuse cases, they break their promises to be ‘open and transparent’. And they endanger other children. Child abusers rarely abuse once. There is no telling how many more children might have needlessly been victimized.

The brave survivor Kevin Braney suffered abuse by two priests, Monsignor Eckermann and Fr. James Quinn.

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Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley has drawn both praise and criticism for record prosecuting child abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
Republican

By Shira Schoenberg | sschoenberg@repub.com
on October 02, 2014

BOSTON — A new ad attacking Massachusetts Democratic gubernatorial candidate Martha Coakley’s work on child welfare goes to the heart of Coakley’s career as a prosecutor.

The ad focuses on alleged mismanagement at the Department of Children and Families, an agency for which Coakley, the attorney general, has advocated reform even as she defended the department against a lawsuit. But the ad is particularly significant because Coakley’s experience with child welfare goes back decades, and has earned her both praise and criticism.

Coakley is opposed by Republican Charlie Baker and independents Evan Falchuk, Scott Lively and Jeff McCormick.

In 1991, Coakley was appointed head of a child abuse division in the Middlesex District Attorney’s office, which dealt with 900 cases a year of physical and sexual abuse. At a press conference Thursday, called for Coakley to respond to the ad, Coakley showed how personal the issue was for her, choking up briefly when she recalled an abuse victim who thanked her years later. “I’ve seen those kids and I’ve worked with them,” Coakley said. …

The Boston Globe in 2009 also reported on a case in which Coakley negotiated a 1995 probation deal, in secret, for a priest accused of inappropriately touching three boys. Coakley would years later win praise for successfully prosecuting the same priest for inappropriately touching another boy. Coakley said she did not have enough evidence in the earlier case to prosecute the priest for indecent assault. The only crime she could identify was a misdemeanor of making harassing phone calls. Child protection advocates faulted her for not prosecuting the case publicly.

Coakley said she has fought many “tough cases.” She has pointed to her work protecting children, and working with doctors and with victims, in numerous other instances.

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Syracuse monsignor removed from ministry over decades-old child-molesting accusation

NEW YORK
Post-Standard

By John O’Brien | jobrien@syracuse.com
on October 02, 2014

SYRACUSE, N.Y. – A child-molesting accusation against a Catholic monsignor and former Bishop Ludden High School principal is credible, the Vatican notified the Syracuse Roman Catholic Diocese today.

The Syracuse Diocese in April removed Monsignor Charles Eckermann from ministry after determining the recently disclosed accusation from a former altar boy from 25 years ago to be credible, a diocese official confirmed today.

The Vatican upheld that finding today, said Danielle Cummings, a spokeswoman for the diocese.

“Charles Eckermann will no longer be able to function as a priest, wear clerical garb or be presented as a priest,” she said of Eckermann, who also served as Syracuse’s school board president decades ago.

The victim, Kevin Braney, said Eckermann raped him more than a dozen times in a basement storage room in the rectory at St. Ann’s Church in Manlius in 1988 and 1989, when Braney was 15 and 16 years old.

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Four Minnesota priests, alleged as sex abusers, named in three new civil lawsuits

MINNESOTA
Noaker Law Firm

(MINNEAPOLIS, October 2, 2014) – Attorneys on October 2, 21014 filed three new civil lawsuits against Catholic church officials on behalf of child sex-abuse survivors who broke their silence to step forward. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is named as a defendant in two cases; the Diocese of New Ulm is named as a defendant in two cases. One case shockingly alleges that two priests molested the same 12-year-old altar boy at Sacred Heart Parish in Robbinsdale.

Attorneys say that the cluster of cases filed October 2, 2014 is a result of more perpetrators being uncovered in their year-and-a-half long investigation into decades of clergy sex abuse — prompting more victims to come forward.

“This is a sad chapter in Minnesota’s history that’s being told one victim at a time,” said Pat Noaker, Minneapolis lawyer and victim’s attorney. “As we piece together these cases, more information is coming to light.”

New victims have filed civil lawsuits since a new law was passed in May 2013 allowing victims age 24 or older a three-year window to sue for their past abuse.

Thursday’s cases revealed a new perpetrator previously not disclosed by church officials or named as a defendant in other cases: Father Ramon Jerome Buckley, of Sacred Heart Parish in Robbinsdale. Buckley is accused of abusing a 12-year-old altar boy in the late 1970s at church, in addition to Father John McGrath abusing the same boy. The alleged double-perpetrator abuse included forced oral sex by both priests and attempted anal rape by McGrath.

“The carnage from these cases is staggering,”

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NEW CASE FILING: Four Minnesota priests, alleged as sex abusers, named in three new civil lawsuits

MINNESOTA
Noaker Law Firm

Year-and-a-Half Investigation by Noaker Attorney Team Uncovers Perpetrators

(MINNEAPOLIS, October 2, 2014) – Attorneys on October 2, 21014 filed three new civil lawsuits against Catholic church officials on behalf of child sex-abuse survivors who broke their silence to step forward. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is named as a defendant in two cases; the Diocese of New Ulm is named as a defendant in two cases. One case shockingly alleges that two priests molested the same 12-year-old altar boy at Sacred Heart Parish in Robbinsdale.

News Release

John Doe 114 v. Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and Diocese of New Ulm

Complaint filed on October 2, 2014

John Doe 115 v. Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Complaint filed on October 2, 2014

Fr. John McGrath

Assignment History

Fr. Ramon J. Buckley

Assignment History

Obituary

John Doe 116 v. Diocese of New Ulm

Complaint served on Diocese on September 16, 2014, filed by mail October 2, 2014

Fr. Michael Skoblik

Assignment History

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Sold! Archdiocese cuts deal to sell 200-acre Don Guanella Village in Marple for $47 million

PENNSYLVANIA
Delaware County Daily Times

By Patti Mengers, Delaware County Daily Times
POSTED: 10/02/14

Officials in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Thursday announced an agreement of sale for the more than 200 acres that comprise the site of Don Guanella Village and the residential Cardinal Krol Center for developmentally disabled men on Sproul Road in Marple, a deal that they expect will help reduce some of the archdiocese’s underfunded liabilities.

Upon closing the deal, Cardinal Crossing Realty Associates, based in Jenkintown, Montgomery County, will pay $47 million for the property, which the company is seeking to develop for commercial and residential use, said Kenneth Gavin, director of Communications for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. He said the transaction will require Vatican approval, which has been granted to the archdiocese in other instances.

Archdiocese of Philadelphia Real Estate Advisory Committee Chairman Walter D’Alessio said numerous offers for the Don Guanella property were evaluated.

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Archdiocese sells Delco property, 2 others for $56.2M

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

HAROLD BRUBAKER, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LAST UPDATED: Thursday, October 2, 2014

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Thursday announced the sale of three suburban properties for $56.2 million and said it will use the proceeds to help plug gaps in its balance sheet.

In addition to the previously reported sale of a 200-plus-acre property in Delaware County to Jenkintown-based Goodman Properties for $47 million, the Archdiocese said that it had an agreement to sell a 454-acre property in Northampton County for $5.5 million, and that it had sold 55 acres in Chester County for $3.7 million.

The $3.7 million from the sale of excess land at the St. John Vianney Center in Downingtown, a behavioral-health center for clergy and woman religious, was deposited into the archdiocesan priests’ pension fund, which previously had a $76.3 million deficit. The buyer was Woodbine Partners L.P.

Net proceeds from the two other sales will go into the Archdiocesan Trust and Loan Fund, which is essentially a private bank for parishes, taking deposits from parishes with extra cash and making loans for building projects, the Archdiocese said.

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Cupich’s record on abuse includes voluntary mediation, contribution to Dallas Charter

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Oct. 2, 2014

During the introductory press conference Sept. 20 of the next leader of the Chicago Catholic church, Blase Cupich was, unsurprisingly, asked about the sexual abuse of minors by clergy.

The archbishop-designate responded that he is committed to protecting children and bringing “healing to people who have been victimized by clergy.”

Cupich then added: “I am not asking people to say that all of a sudden they find me a credible individual because they really don’t know me. I will just say that I will work hard at this and make it an important part of my ministry.”

To better understand whether Cupich might fulfill that pledge requires an examination of his track record on handling allegations and instances of clergy sexual abuse, one that includes stints in national positions as well as a lawsuit against former diocesan lawyers and a mediated settlement for future claims.

From 2002 to 2005, he served on the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ ad hoc Committee on Sexual Abuse. That position placed him among those who in June 2002 drafted the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, otherwise known as the Dallas Charter.

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Warum soviel Kleinglaube? – Zur Situation der Kirche heute

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Mainz

[Column by Cardinal Lehmann in the church newspaper “Faith and Life”.

We have certainly been through in the last few years a number of experiences that have the reputation of the church seriously damaged.

It began after the turn of the millennium with some cases of sexual abuse. A decade later was revealed by this offense even more, even if there were relatively few offenders. But each one is one too many. The affair of the former Bishop of Limburg was added and has also shaken confidence.]

Kolumne von Kardinal Lehmann in der Kirchenzeitung “Glaube und Leben”

Wir haben gewiss in den letzten Jahren eine Reihe von Erfahrungen mitgemacht, die dem Ansehen der Kirche schwer geschadet haben.

Es fing nach der Jahrtausendwende an mit einigen Fällen des sexuellen Missbrauchs. Ein Jahrzehnt später wurde von diesen Vergehen noch mehr aufgedeckt, auch wenn es relativ wenige Täter waren. Aber jeder ist einer zu viel. Die Affäre um den früheren Limburger Bischof kam hinzu und hat zusätzlich Vertrauen erschüttert. Von manchen, die der Kirche eher feindselig gegenüberstehen, wurde dies oft in unverschämter Weise ausgeschlachtet, Transparente unter dem Titel „Limburg ist überall!” waren zu sehen. Wir durften uns nicht viel beklagen, denn die Ursache für die harte Kritik lag bei uns selbst. Wenn die Angriffe pauschal gegen die Kirche und die Bischöfe im Ganzen gerichtet wurden, war es dennoch nicht so einfach, diese Angriffe zu ertragen, wenn man selbst überhaupt nicht beteiligt und verantwortlich war.

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“Spacerował na luzie” po Watykanie. Zdjęcia abp. Wesołowskiego sprzed aresztowania

POLSKA
TVN24

[z wideo]

[Photographer Herb Kralkowki told TVN24 that former Archbishop Joseph Wesolowski walked about at ease before he was put under house arrest. He learned when he started to work on this issue in Feburary that the former papal nuncio was living in a fairly upscale house for prelates called the Casa del Clero. His agency asked him to see if he would take some pictures of Wesolowski. He decided to engage Wesolowski in conversation. Wesolowski at first seem to be “nice” and was curious that someone was looking for him and wanted to talk. But when he realized that Kralkowski intended to raise the issue of the pedophilia allegations against him he ended the conversation and said he could not speak but everything would be explained in a timely manner “in the bosom of the Vatican.”]

Fotograf Jurek Kralkowski opowiedział TVN24 o tym, jak zrobił zdjęcia abp. Józefa Wesołowskiego, zanim były nuncjusz został umieszczony w areszcie domowym za murami Watykanu. – Spacerował na luzie, oglądał się na lewo, prawo – opowiada Kralkowski. Już wtedy na hierarsze ciążyły poważne zarzuty pedofilii.

– Zacząłem zajmować się tą kwestią w lutym. Dowiedziałem się, że (arcybiskup – red.) jest w dość ekskluzywnym hotelu dla prałatów, który nazywa się Casa del Clero. Moja agencja poprosiła mnie, bym zobaczył, czy uda mu się zrobić jakieś zdjęcia – opowiada Kralkowski. Jak mówi, przesiedział tam ponad tydzień, a w końcu postanowił po prostu zapytać, czy Wesołowski ma ochotę na rozmowę.

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Sinead O’Connor: ‘I Find It Laughable That They’re Talking About Revolutionizing The Church’

IRELAND
Huffington Post

By Antonia Blumberg

Irish singer Sinead O’Connor has no faith in Catholic Church reforms under Pope Francis, she told Billboard in an interview for the August 16 issue.

“I find it quite laughable that they’re talking about revolutionizing the church when, in fact, they’re equating female ordination and pedophilia,“ the singer said. “When you consider that, it shows you how little they think of children and the rape of children.”

In July 2010 the Vatican added a provision to what was intended to be a sweeping reform that would once and for all address the ongoing sex abuses in the church. The new rules included procedures for defrocking priests for sex abuses under canon law and extended the period during which trials could take place in a church court from 10 to 20 years after the 18th birthday of his victim.

Much to the dismay of many Catholics, the Vatican added a provision to the document that made the “attempted ordination” of women one of the “gravest offenses a priest can commit” — essentially putting it on par with sexual abuse.

O’Connor has criticized the Catholic Church over the years for sex abuses and coverups, but she said she doesn’t blame the incumbent pope personally.

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Vaticano pedofilia, vittima di abusi denuncia: “Io violentato per 6 mesi e pagato per tacere”

POLONIA
Preti Pedofili

Ecco la testimonianza di Marcin Kubicki, lo studente 26enne vittima di abusi sessuali che ha scritto una lettera a Papa Francesco per denunciare l’omertà del cardinale Kazimierz Nycz, quando era a capo della diocesi di Stettino (Polonia).

Lo scandalo pedofilia che ha travolto il Vaticano non finisce. Nuove tristi realtà emergono dall’inchiesta voluta fortemente da Papa Francesco. L’accusa di abusi sessuali su minori non riguarda infatti solo il cardinale Joseph Wesolowksi, arrestato in Vaticano il 23 settembre. Retroscena meschini ed omertosi si celano dietro l’apparenza, e si ha come l’impressione che le notizie diffuse dai media non illustrino che una minima parte della verità.

—————–

Vatican pedophilia, abused complaint: “I raped for 6 months and paid for silence”

September 29, 2014

Here is the testimony of Marcin Kubicki, the student 26 year old victim of sexual abuse who wrote a letter to Pope Francis to denounce the silence of Cardinal Kazimierz Nycz, when he was head of the Diocese of Szczecin (Poland).

The pedophilia scandal that has engulfed the Vatican does not end. New sad reality emerge from the strongly desired by Pope Francis. The accusation of sexual abuse of minors is not merely concerns the cardinal Wesolowksi Joseph , who was arrested at the Vatican September 23. Background petty and conspiratorial lie behind the appearance, and you get the impression that the media reports do not illustrate a small part of the truth.

In addition to the two cardinals Marco Antonio Ordenes and Gabino Miranda Melgarejo , suspected of pedophilia and investigated within the investigation in place, now it turns out another name suspicion is that the Archbishop of Warsaw Kazimierz Nycz . The cardinal is called to testify to sexual abuse by priests, some of whom tried and convicted.It seems that Nycz is guilty of ‘covered’ repeated child abuse in his diocese, in the province of Szczecin (Poland). This was stated by Marcin Kubicki , a student, 26, who in a letter to Pope Francis is first and last name of his tormentor, the priest Zbigniew Ryckiewicz , sentenced to 2 years in 2012 by the Polish justice, and now imprisoned in Szczecinek.

The young Kubicki was a victim of his violence when he was only 13 years old. Today horror is still vivid in his memory, and tells it like this: “Remember it pains me every time. Anyway, I met Father Zbigniew Ryckiewicz in junior high, after being engaged by him in the cemetery of Kolobrzeg, Szczecin province, where he had officiated at a funeral. From him I have been abused several times. I started to get scared. He told me not to tell anyone what he did. The abuse continued for 6 months. I paid 500 zloty (125 euro) for my silence ” . Kubicki addressed to the Holy Father in the hope that justice be served in so many other victims of pedophilia, which unfortunately is consumed – almost undisturbed – in the ‘sacred’ rooms of the Church.

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We are all in big trouble if the Synod radicals get their way

UNITED STATES
LifeSite News

At first glance, Monday’s story on the sexual escapades of UK bishop Kieran Conry might be seen as inappropriate scandal mongering better kept out of the public light. A closer reading reveals something entirely different. The article is instead an instructive expose related to calls from some clergy for the upcoming Synod on the Family to dramatically loosen application of Church moral teachings.

The bishop Conry report presents a timely example of just one of numerous dissenting Catholic clergy, publicly opposed to or far too quietly, if at all, defending the Church’s moral teachings, who in the end are frequently found to have been so because they have been violating those teachings in their personal lives. This is something LifeSite has encountered very frequently over the years, especially among, but not limited to homosexual clergy.

The other notable aspect of Monday’s report is that the bishop’s double life was known to other clergy and hierarchy and yet no one acted upon the scandal. That was one contributing factor to the great sex abuse scandals. The almost universal unwillingness or fear of clergy to hold their brother priests and bishops to account for serious misbehaviour is another common occurrence that seriously needs addressing. Allowing a loosening of Church moral teaching or pastoral application to develop out of the upcoming synod on the family is unlikely to address or correct anything.

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IL- Springfield bishop challenges Muslims; SNAP responds

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October, 2014

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

Springfield Catholic Bishop Thomas Paprocki is challenging Muslim leaders to denounce Islamic extremists, much like “every priest and bishop has to speak out about the sexual abuse crisis in the (Catholic) church.

We, in turn, challenge Paprocki to instruct all of his priests to do exactly that – speak out about the sexual abuse and cover up crisis in the church. As best we can tell, only a tiny number of priests have done this.

Specifically, we urge Paprocki to tell his clerics to stand in their pulpits this weekend and tell their flocks to:

–call law enforcement if they have seen, suspected or suffered abuse,
–ask their loved ones “Did any church official ever hurt you?” and
–stress the importance of continued vigilance over tempting complacency.

He should also tell the priests to avoid:

–minimizing the crimes and cover ups,
–make excuses for the widespread wrongdoing,
–urging parishioners to call church officials, and
–saying or implying that the crisis is largely over.

We don’t know of a single bishop in the US who has done this. Having issued a similar challenged to Muslims, Paprocki should lead by example and become the first Catholic prelate to make sure that his priests do address the on-going abuse and cover up scandal in a compassionate and helpful way.

And as bishop, he can – and should – do more than talk. He should take concrete steps to protect kids, like:

–posting names, photos and whereabouts of predator priests on his website (30 US bishops have done this), and
–turning over to law enforcement officials the personnel files of every proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesting cleric, to see if they might be prosecuted or if those who hid these crimes might be prosecuted.

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NE- More child sexual abuse victims come forward

NEBRASKA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 02, 2014

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

A man who was convicted of child sex crimes in Nebraska is being sued for more such offenses in Connecticut. We are grateful to the brave survivors who have come forward and are demanding justice not just from the alleged perpetrator, but also from the religious organization.

Orlando Afanador, who is on the sex offender registry for sexually abusing a boy in Nebraska, allegedly abused at least 4 more children when he was an ordained minister with Jehovah’s Witnesses at the time of the abuse.

We are grateful that more victims have found the courage to speak up and expose a potentially dangerous individual and an organization that allegedly did not due their due diligence to keep children safe. We suspect that there are others in Nebraska and Connecticut who were assaulted by Afanador and are still suffering in silence, shame and self-blame. We hope they will find the courage to step forward, call police, expose wrongdoers, protect kids and start healing.

Jehovah’s Witness officials should immediately reach out to anyone else who may have been hurt by Afanador.

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Horsham Catholics applaud Bishop Kieran for honesty

UNITED KINGDOM
West Sussex County Times

Catholics in Horsham have reacted with disappointment at the news their diocesan bishop had resigned.

On Sunday Bishop Kieran Conry’s statement was read out in all Catholic churches in the Arundel and Brighton Catholic Diocese.

Sue Frank, who goes to St John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Horsham, said: “It is very easy for people to criticise a man in Bishop Kieran Conry’s position. Although we are all shocked and saddened about the news of his resignation, I feel we need to think of him with love and understanding – he is a human being and as such deserves to be loved and respected for his compassion as a priest, and his honesty and humility as a man.”

She added he was a ‘wonderful, generous and kind church leader’.

Bishop Kieran is known in the church for his popularity with young people.

Maria Stack, confirmation catechist at St John’s, said: “The Bishop Kieran I knew and loved was a humble, holy man whose greatest skill was his communication with young people.

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Bishop Finn investigation is another sign that accountability is on Pope Francis’ agenda

KANSAS CITY (MO)
John Thavis

The news that the Vatican is investigating the pastoral leadership of Bishop Robert W. Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., is another sign that Pope Francis is willing to tackle the problem of bishops’ accountability in a new way.

The National Catholic Reporter reported that, at the Vatican’s request, Canadian Archbishop Terrence Prendergast visited the Kansas City-St. Joseph diocese for several days last week, asking more than a dozen interview subjects questions about Finn’s leadership abilities. A spokesperson for the diocese later confirmed the investigation and said Finn was “cooperating with the process.”

Two years ago, a civil court convicted Finn on misdemeanor charges of failing to report suspected child abuse, in connection with the child pornography conviction of a local priest. The bishop was sentenced to two years’ probation.

News of the Vatican investigation comes on the heels of the pope’s removal of a Paraguayan bishop who had been criticized, among other things, for his promotion of a priest accused of child abuse.

Catholics in Missouri have called for Finn’s resignation, but until now there was no sign that the Vatican was paying any attention. For many Catholics, in fact, Bishop Finn has come to represent a bishop’s protected status and the Vatican’s unwillingness to take action on mishandling of sex abuse cases.

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The Church knew about Father Michael Aulsebrook’s child-abuse

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

Catholic Church authorities knowingly kept a child-molester (Father Michael Aulsebrook) in the priesthood and even promoted him to be in charge of a school, according to statements made in an Australian criminal court in 2011. Now Aulsebrook is no longer in the priesthood but in 2014 police are conducting further investigations about his past.

Michael Scott Aulsebrook appeared in the Melbourne County Court on 22 August 2011 (when he was aged 55) for sentencing after he pleaded guilty to multiple incidents of indecent assault, committed against a 12-year-old boy.

The court was told that this was not the only boy who lodged a complaint about Aulsebrook. A separate complaint in 1993 by another boy had been settled by the church, in private, out-of-court.

Aulsebrook’s lawyer conceded that Aulsebrook’s offending was not isolated, the court was told.

Representatives of the church gave character evidence for Aulsebrook and were in court at the sentencing to show their support for him (rather than supporting the victim).

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Vatican meeting a test case for Pope Francis’ papacy

VATICAN CITY
Daily Mail

By Philip Pullella

VATICAN CITY, Oct 2 (Reuters) – A global assembly of Roman Catholic bishops is shaping up as the first major showdown of Pope Francis’s papacy, with conservative and progressive cardinals trading insults ahead of its start on Sunday.

The two-week synod on the theme of the family will be attended by more than 250 people — nearly all of them bishops of the 1.2 billion-member Church and also 13 married couples.

The session will prepare the way for a larger gathering of Catholic clerics next year and could become a milestone in the clash between conservatives and liberals over the future direction of a Church that the pope has insisted must become less bureaucratic and theologically esoteric.
The synod, the first since Francis’ election in March 2013, is seen as a test case for him and his vision of a Church he wants to be closer to the poor and suffering and not “obsessed” by issues such as homosexuality, abortion and contraception.

The run-up to the meeting has been dominated by a rare public feud between cardinals centred on whether the Church should modify teachings that ban Catholics who have divorced and then remarried in civil services from receiving communion.

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Vile Christian Brother admits groping 10-year-old boys’ privates as they sat in classroom

IRELAND
Irish Mirror

Oct 01, 2014 By Brian McDonald

A vile Christian Brother sexually abused boys as young as ten as they sat in class, a court heard yesterday.

The shocking details of the sex assaults on the boys at a national school in the midlands were revealed to Mullingar Circuit Court sitting in Tullamore.

Evil Thomas McCarry, 66, of Clareville, Finglas Road, Glasnevin in Dublin admitted a series of sample charges of indecently assaulting four boys on dates at the school between 1984 and 1987.

Garda Eric Naughton told the court that the assaults came to light in 2010 when one of Bro McCarry’s victims made a statement. The others later made statements, the latest in March of last year.

The assaults all took place during class while the boys were aged 10-11 and in fifth and sixth class in national school.

Each of the victims outlined how Belfast native McCarry would approach them from behind and lean over as if to help with their schoolwork.

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Diocese knew about abuse by KC priest but did nothing, witnesses tell jury

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

BY JUDY L. THOMAS
THE KANSAS CITY STAR

10/01/2014

A well-known public relations consultant, a Catholic nun and a former school board vice president told a Jackson County jury Wednesday that they had reported sexual abuse concerns involving Monsignor Thomas O’Brien to the diocese over a span of decades, but nothing was ever done.

The testimony came on the third day of a civil trial involving Jon David Couzens, who says O’Brien sexually abused him 30 years ago and that the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph was told repeatedly that O’Brien was a danger to children but failed to prevent the abuse.

“I expected some sort of response and some sort of censure,” said Kansas City marketing professional Pat O’Neill after telling jurors that O’Brien had groped him at a Halloween party in 1973. O’Neill, who was 20 at the time, said he wrote then-Bishop Charles Helmsing in 1975 but never received a response. He contacted the diocese again in 1979, through a phone call and a letter to auxiliary Bishop George Fitzsimons.

“The context of my letter and my phone call was, ‘What about the young people who can’t defend themselves?’” O’Neill said.

The trial, in Jackson County Circuit Court in Independence, stems from a lawsuit filed by Couzens in 2011. The diocese contends that no credible evidence exists to prove Couzens’ abuse allegations and argues that his claims of repressed memory are invalid.

O’Brien, who has been the subject of dozens of sexual abuse lawsuits, was named as a co-defendant but was dismissed after his death in October 2013. He was 87.

Jurors heard testimony from five witnesses Wednesday, including Suzanne Ellis, who said her brother told her years ago that O’Brien had sexually abused him in 1963. She said she called the diocese to report it on numerous occasions, starting in 1979. Each time, Ellis said, she was told that the diocese could only take a report from her brother.

“They didn’t want to hear me,” she said. “My reaction was disbelief. I was not asked my phone number, I was not asked my address, I did not receive any follow-up calls.”

Ellis said she had told her sister, a nun with the Sisters of St. Francis, about the alleged abuse between 1989 and 1991. The nun, Sister Marilyn Barry, told jurors she looked up O’Brien’s phone number and called him the night she was told.

“I said, ‘Hello, monsignor. … You abused my little brother,’” Barry told jurors. “He said, ‘Which one was he?’ My final words were, ‘You dirty son of a bitch.’ And I hung up the phone. I was so violently upset with the response that I got.”

Janice Fristoe, who had a son at Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary elementary school in Independence in the early 1980s and was vice president of the school board, testified by video that she received numerous complaints about O’Brien. Some teachers told her that boys were being called out of class by O’Brien for so long and so often that they’d fallen behind and had to receive tutoring. She said stories also were circulating about O’Brien taking boys to his house at Lake Viking, drinking with them and “having his way” with them.

She said she met with then-Bishop John J. Sullivan and Monsignor Robert Hogan to voice her concernsabout O’Brien.

“He (Sullivan) simply said, ‘Well, we think he might have a drinking problem, and those things happen when he’s drinking,’” she said. “I came away from that meeting very disappointed. I felt that the bishop let his parishioners down, let me down.”

Three weeks later, Fristoe said, teachers told her there had been a fire drill. They said the school had been evacuated but that they’d all had to wait 45 minutes because O’Brien had three boys with him in the sacristy and they hadn’t come out.

Fristoe said she confronted O’Brien at the next school board meeting.

“He looked at me with gritting teeth and said, ‘You will never question anything I do in this parish ever again,’” she said. Fristoe said she left the meeting and called Hogan the next day.

“I told him I could no longer leave my son in that school because I felt that he was in danger,” she said. She transferred him at the end of the school year.

Couzens’ attorney, Rebecca Randles, asked Fristoe if O’Brien’s access to boys was limited after she met with Sullivan.

“None whatsoever,” she said.

To reach Judy L. Thomas, call 816-234-4334 or send email to jthomas@kcstar.com.

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Sacerdote suspendido por caso de abuso sexual no comparece a tribunal

PUERTO RICO
Primera Hora

[Israel Berrios Berios, the first priest to be accused in Puerto Rico of sexually abuse a minor, is in a federal prison in Atlanta, Ga., and was not moved to Puerto Rico for state judicial process. It remains unseen whether Berrios Berrios will plead guilty in state court. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for Wedneday in Puerto Rico but he could not attend because he had not been moved from Atlanta.]

Por Daniel Rivera Vargas
10/01/2014

Aibonito – Aún es incierto si Israel Berríos Berríos, el primer sacerdote católico acusado en Puerto Rico por abusar sexualmente de un menor de edad, se declarará culpable en el tribunal estatal, tal y como hizo en la jurisdicción federal.

Hoy, miércoles, a las 2:00 p.m. estaba pautado el inicio de la vista preliminar contra Berríos Berríos, de 59 años, pero en su lugar se informó que el acusado se encuentra en una cárcel federal en Atlanta y no fue trasladado a Puerto Rico para el proceso judicial estatal.

La jueza Yazmín Chávez Dávila, de la Sala 4 en el Centro Judicial de Aibonito, reseñaló la vista preliminar para el 13 de noviembre, a las 9:00 a.m., explicó Edwin Mora, el abogado del suspendido sacerdote.

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Jerry Brown is modern Roman Governor Pontius Pilate who denied justice hence crucified Jesus. Gov. Brown vetoes SB 924, denies justice, crucifies victims

CALIFORNIA
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

Read our related article: Ex-Jesuit Gov. Jerry Brown vetoes SB131, invokes Roman law, perpetuates cover-up of 20th Century JP2 Army who stabs the heart of Jesus’ mother
http://popecrimes.blogspot.ca/2013/08/california-bill-sb-131-must-win-next.html

Roman Catholic Governor Jerry Brown is the modern-day Roman Governor Pontius Pilate who denied justice and hence crucified Jesus. Akin to Pontius Pilate, Roman Catholic Governor Jerry Brown denies justice as he vetoes Senate Bill 924 and consequently crucifies hundreds or thousands of victims of the bestial Roman Catholic JP2 Army – John Paul II Pedophile Priests Army and other institutions like the Boy Scouts in California. Akin to Roman Governor Pontius Pilate who washed his hands, Roman Catholic Governor Jerry Brown also washes his hands by declaring his baloney Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team alibi, “There comes a time when an individual or organization should be secure in the reasonable expectation that past acts are indeed in the past and not subject to further lawsuits…

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Priest, inmate were team in fraud scheme, jury told

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free Press

Patricia Montemurri, Detroit Free Press Staff Writer October 1, 2014

Detroit Catholic priest Timothy Kane allegedly skimmed money for himself from the Angel Fund charity by conspiring with a state prison inmate, who recruited people to make false requests for aid which Kane then approved, a Wayne County Circuit Court jury was told Wednesday.

Telephone calls between the priest and the prisoner, Fonsha Reid, were taped and monitored by the state Department of Corrections, which notified the Archdiocese of Detroit in July 2012 about suspicious conversations between the two.

The archdiocese then conducted an internal investigation before turning over its findings to the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office a few months later.

Archdiocese investigator James Smith, a retired police officer who works for the archdiocese’s law firm, testified that Kane, as associate pastor of a trio of Detroit and Highland Park churches, signed off on 10-15 “suspicious” requests from the Angel Fund totaling about $131,000 in 2008-12.

Kane is charged with stealing less than $20,000 in relation to those Angel Fund monies. Kane faces six counts.

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Will the Vatican Finally Hold This Kansas City Bishop Accountable?

VATICAN CITY
The Daily Beast

Barbie Latza Nadeau

The Vatican’s investigation of an American bishop could lead the way to real accountability for predatory priests, or could be business as usual for the troubled church.

VATICAN CITY — Father Shawn Ratigan of Independence, Missouri, liked to take pictures of naked little girls. He especially liked little girls between the ages of two and 12. He liked to make them pose for him—sometimes completely nude, sometimes sprawled out on the grass of the fenced-in parish lawn, and sometimes he made them pull their panties away from their buttocks and vaginas so he could get a better view. Sometimes he stole pictures in what authorities would call “up-skirt” covert images of little girls’ crotches from under tables or in the nearby Catholic school playground. He used a digital camera or his cell phone, downloading hundreds if not thousands of the pedo-pornographic pictures onto his laptop.

Ratigan would probably still be producing child pornography if a computer technician named Ken Kes hadn’t found the disturbing images on the priest’s computer in 2009 when the Kansas City diocese called him to repair the sluggish machine. According to a Reuters report outlining the priest’s sins, Kes found the “odd images” when he was fixing the priest’s laptop.

Kes returned the computer to the administrator at the Kansas City diocese, which was, and still is, under the direction of Bishop Robert Finn. “I looked at the first one. It was a young girl climbing up the back of a pickup truck and I thought, huh, that’s kind of a neat shot,” Kes testified in court. “The next one that I clicked on was a girl climbing out of swimming pool and all it showed was her rear end. Then there was a little girl on the grass with her legs spread. All you could see was the area from her belly button to her knees. I stopped looking right there and got on the phone.”

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Did the Catholic Church Get Away with Murder?

BALTIMORE (MD)
Inside Baltimore

By Tom Nugent

October 2014 – Forty-five years after the murder of a Catholic teaching nun who was reportedly trying to alert authorities to widespread sex abuse at her Catholic high school in Baltimore, a victim of the alleged abuse has come forward to say that Church officials and local police “know the priest was involved” in the murder – but have been engaged in a decades-long cover-up.

Baltimore attorney Teresa Lancaster, now 60, also says she was awarded $40,000 for her abuse-related injuries – along with cost-free psychological counseling – by Church officials four years ago. She was given the money, she says, in return for signing a release document drawn up by the Archdiocese of Baltimore. A letter to her from Archdiocesan officials to that effect was reviewed by Inside Baltimore and confirms Ms. Lancaster’s statements about both the award and the terms of the release.

The same Archdiocese of Baltimore sent Ms. Lancaster a letter of apology for the crimes that were reportedly committed against her as a child at Archbishop Keough High School in southwest Baltimore. The letter to Ms. Lancaster from the Archdiocese of Baltimore Office of Child & Youth Protection Director Alison D’Alessandro and dated December 7, 2010, reads in part as follows:

Please accept my apology on behalf of [former] Archbishop [Edwin] O’Brien and the Archdiocese of Baltimore for the suffering that has resulted from your experiences.

It has long been the policy of the Archdiocese to offer counseling assistance to anyone who may have been harmed by a cleric or other representatives of the Church. . . .

As we discussed, we would like to assist you with counseling services. We will make payments directly to the counselor of your choice. . . .

I can only imagine how difficult it was for you to speak with me about this. Again, I am deeply sorry for what has happened.

In spite of the compassion and concern displayed in the letter, however, the Archdiocese of Baltimore has never publicly admitted that the Keough sex abuse – now alleged to have affected at least 50 students in the late 1960s and early 1970s – actually took place.

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The Bishop Deposed in Paraguay. The Defense Speaks

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

He has been removed without being able to read the charges against him. He has knocked at the pope’s door without being received. Here is his reconstruction of events, against the dramatic backdrop of the Church in his country

by Sandro Magister

ROME, October 2, 2014 – It is rare for a pope to depose a bishop. It is even more outlandish for a Jesuit pope to kick out a bishop of Opus Dei.

And yet this is what has happened in Ciudad del Este, the diocese of Paraguay overlooking Iguazù Falls on the border with Brazil and Argentina, in the territory that from three to four centuries ago was civilized and Christianized by the Jesuit missionaries of the “Reductions.”

Rogelio Ricardo Livieres Plano, the bishop whom pope Jorge Mario Bergoglio has deposed, had been in Rome for a few days when on September 25 he received the news that he had been removed.

He was told over the telephone by Cardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the congregation for bishops, at the very same time as the nuncio was making it public in Paraguay, shortly before the official Vatican statement.

In a note accompanying the statement, the press office of the Holy See attributed the removal of Livieres to the results of the apostolic visitation conducted in Ciudad del Este during the preceding months.

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Story from My Own Backyard …

ARKANSAS
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Story from My Own Backyard: Arkansas Priest Removed from Ministry Due to “Multiple Acts of Sexual Misconduct” Is Outspoken Opponent of Gay Marriage

A disclaimer: I do not know Father James Melnick. I seem to have heard the name, but on the far margins to which our Catholic church has relegated us, Steve and I have little contact with the local institution. It is hard for a church to make anyone more unwelcome than to take away their livelihood and destroy their vocations (in our case, as Catholic theologians), while refusing to provide any reason for doing this (in my case) or providing specious, dishonest reasons (in Steve’s case).

It is hard to make people more unwelcome in your church than to proclaim that you love and accept everyone and respect the human rights of everyone, while you remove the daily bread from the mouths of a targeted minority group, blocking their ministries and vocations, expelling them from community, tarnishing their reputations, all while you, when you are a priest or a religious engaging in this reprehensible behavior, have the assurance of daily bread for yourself, of a job, a good reputation, a welcome to engage in ministry in the church. And when your theological educations were paid for by your diocese or religious community, while those of the lay theologians you are treating so unjustly were bought by great sacrifice and hard work — and you were assured of a job, as a priest or religious, the moment you finished your graduate education. Unlike those lay theologians.

As I say, from the margins to which Steve and I have been relegated as Catholic theologians, I don’t hear much about what’s going on in our local Catholic community. So I know nothing about Father James Melnick other than what is being reported in the local media and in this statement by Bishop Anthony Taylor last weekend.

I do not presume to judge James Melnick. I have no window into his soul. Judgment of people’s souls belongs to God alone.

But I do have some questions after I’ve read Bishop Taylor’s statement, which states that he has just removed Father Melnick from ministry after he was able to “verify multiple acts of sexual misconduct with multiple adult victims during the period of less than a year.” In particular, I have questions about what can possibly be going through the mind of a priest who engages in “multiple acts of sexual misconduct with multiple adult victims” when, at the very same time those acts of misconduct are taking place, he publishes a statement attacking (and here) the right of his fellow human beings who happen to have been made gay by God to enjoy the same privileges others may enjoy through civil marriage.

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Florida woman says she is the daughter of singing priest Fr Michael Cleary

FLORIDA
Irish Central

Patrick Counihan @irishcentral September 30,2014

A Florida woman who claims she is the daughter of controversial Irish priest Fr Michael Cleary is to seek DNA tests to prove her story.

Felicia Irwin was given up for adoption as a baby by mother Phyllis Hamilton, the housekeeper who was the mother of two sons by Fr Cleary, who was known in Ireland as the Singing Priest.

In her autobiography, the late Hamilton claimed Felicia was conceived when she was raped by a student priest who was later thrown out of the Catholic Church.

But Irwin has told the Irish Independent that Hamilton confessed later that Fr Clearly could be her father.

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Siblings Sue Jehovah’s Witnesses Over Alleged Child Sex Abuse

CONNECTICUT
The Hartford Courant

By Dave Altimari

Three siblings allege in lawsuits that they were sexually abused by a member of the Jehovah’s Witnesses organization when they were children living in New Haven.

The lawsuits, filed in New Haven Superior Court, allege that the siblings from the Almodovar family were sexually abused over a five-year period starting in 1988 by Orlando Afanador, a “ministerial servant.” Their lawyers say it is the first lawsuits filed in Connecticut against the religious organization.

On Wednesday, sisters Sybelle Almodovar and Evelyn Selimaj attended a press conference held by their attorneys, Irwin Zalkin of San Diego and Thomas McNamara of New Haven, to announce the lawsuits against the East Spanish Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses New Haven and the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York. A spokesman for the organization had no comment.

Their brother, Ferdinand Almodovar, also filed suit. McNamara said a fourth lawsuit alleging similar claims of sexual abuse by Afanador will be filed for Bianca Martinez, another former New Haven resident.

Afanador is on the state sexual offender registry. The registry indicates he was convicted of sexual assault of a child in Omaha, Nebraska in August of 2010 and was released from prison in January of 2013. It indicates he currently lives in New Haven. He could not be reached for comment.

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Jehovah’s Witnesses in New Haven sued over alleged sexual abuse

CONNECTICUT
New Haven Register

By Michelle Tuccitto Sullo, New Haven Register

POSTED: 10/01/14

NEW HAVEN >>Three women and one man are suing the New Haven East Spanish Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, claiming they were sexually abused by a church leader as children.

At a press conference Wednesday, attorneys Thomas McNamara of New Haven and Irwin Zalkin of San Diego announced plans to file four lawsuits in Superior Court in New Haven on behalf of their clients.

The four plaintiffs claim they were sexually abused by Orlando Afanador, 50, of New Haven, who is on the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection’s sex offender registry for an unrelated 2010 conviction for sexual assault of a child in Nebraska.

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Brown OKs longer time for child abuse prosecutions — but not for damage suits

CALIFORNIA
SF Gate

By Bob Egelko

The law treats child abuse differently than most other crimes, because of the age of the victims and their natural inclination to put their nightmares behind them. So the legal deadline, or statute of limitations, for filing criminal charges of child abuse is the victim’s 28th birthday, or even later if the victim hasn’t yet realized that the cause of his or her current emotional trauma was a long-forgotten sexual assault.

When state Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, sponsored legislation this year to lengthen the statute of limitations until the victim turns 40, he cited the same rationale — that traumatized victims often suppress painful memories, sometimes with their therapists’ encouragement — and the bill, SB926, sailed through both houses without an opposing vote. On Tuesday, Gov. Jerry Brown signed it into law, effective next year.

Beall carried another bill, SB924, to extend the filing deadline for civil damage suits over child abuse from the victim’s 26th birthday to age 40. It passed both houses, with some dissent, and reached the governor’s desk. On Tuesday, Brown vetoed it.

“Statutes of limitations exist as a matter of fundamental fairness,” Brown wrote in his veto message. “As I wrote last year (when he vetoed another Beall measure on child abuse lawsuits), there comes a time when an individual or organization should be secure in the reasonable expectation that past acts are indeed in the past and not subject to further lawsuits. With the passage of time, evidence may be lost or disposed of, memories fade and witnesses move away or die.”

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Complainants: Religious servant molested us

VERMONT
Brattleboro Reformer

By DOMENIC POLI / Reformer Staff
POSTED: 10/02/2014

BELLOWS FALLS — New details emerged in a case of alleged sexual abuse when two sisters filed lawsuits against the local and international Jehovah’s Witness governing bodies for turning a blind eye to their molestation by a congregation member 20 years ago.

Annessa Lewis, 27, and Miranda Lewis, 23, are suing the Bellows Falls congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, which they attended as children, and claim it buried the issue when they were sexually abused by “ministerial servant” Norton True at ages 5 and 4 in the early 1990s. The lawsuits were filed Wednesday against True, the Bellows Falls congregation and the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, Inc., the international headquarters of the Jehovah’s Witness faith.

According to the lawsuits filed by Irwin M. Zalkin of The Zalkin Law Firm in San Diego, Calif., True abused Annessa Lewis before her fifth birthday and later did the same to Miranda. Zalkin has previously partnered with Jerome O’Neill of Gravel & Shea in Burlington to fight the Roman Catholic Church on cases of child sex abuse and they have recently been working for victims of abuse at the hands of Jehovah’s Witness organizations. Zalkin said Miranda Lewis came across his law firm while researching online and contacted him.

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Abuse suits accuse Jehovah’s Witnesses

VERMONT
Rutland Herald

By Neal P. Goswami
VERMONT PRESS BUREAU | October 01,2014

BURLINGTON — Two sisters are suing a Vermont congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, its parent organization and a congregation official, alleging sexual abuse about 20 years ago.

Annessa Lewis, 27, and Miranda Lewis, 23, say they were abused as children by Norton True, who was serving as a “ministerial servant” for the Bellows Falls Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses. The suit also names as a defendant the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society of New York, the governing body of the congregation.

Miranda Lewis and her mother, Marina Mauvoleon-Folsom, attended a Burlington news conference Tuesday with two attorneys to announce the lawsuits.

The sisters are represented by Irwin Zalkin of The Zalkin Law Firm in San Diego and New York City, and Jerome O’Neill of Gravel & Shea PC in Burlington. O’Neill is known for winning millions in sexual abuse judgments against Vermont’s Roman Catholic diocese.

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Paprocki: Muslims must speak out against ISIS

ILLINOIS
State Journal-Register

By Steven Spearie
Correspondent
Posted Sep. 29, 2014

Springfield Catholic Bishop Thomas John Paprocki is calling on Muslims throughout the United States to more forcefully denounce the Islamic State (ISIS) threat that has prompted U.S.-led coalition airstrikes in Syria.

In an interview with The State Journal-Register last week, Paprocki said Muslim groups have “a greater responsibility” to speak out against jihadist movements, much like “every priest and bishop has to speak out about the sexual abuse crisis in the (Catholic) church.”

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A shameful history

IRELAND
Irish News

John Boyne hit the best-seller lists with his 2006 novel for young adults The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas. His latest, adult-oriented title concerns an Irish priest wrestling with his culpability over sexual abuse perpetrated by colleagues over decades. It’s a novel the Dublin author felt compelled to write, he tells David Roy

IN JOHN Boyne’s A History of Loneliness, a fundamentally decent Irish priest pays a highly personal price for ignoring the deviant activities of his fellow Catholic clergy.

When Odran Yates finds himself railroaded into ‘the mother’s vocation’ in the wake of a family tragedy, it is the early 1970s – a time when priests are still treated with literal reverence by the wider community in Ireland.

However, even in those halcyon days, there were rumours of unspeakable abuses of power taking place in Catholic schools, churches and even in the homes of families who would never think to question a priest’s motives for wanting to be alone with their vulnerable young offspring.

For his own reasons, Odran chooses to turn a blind eye to such transgressions as he pursues the calling he quickly realises he’s actually quite suited to. As a gifted student, the young priest even finds himself selected to complete his studies in Rome, where he is bestowed the greater honour of serving the Pope directly – two Popes in fact.

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Losing hope that Pope Francis will bring real change to the Church

IRELAND
Irish Central

Tom Deignan @irishcentral October 01,2014

Perhaps the most damning sign that Pope Francis’ honeymoon is over was a recent essay published in Harper’s magazine entitled “Francis and the Nuns.”

The essay was written by Mary Gordon, a novelist and longtime observer of Irish Catholics in America.

“At least since the priesthood was first shaken by the sexual-abuse scandal two decades ago, and perhaps even before then, America’s nuns have been the de facto leaders of the country’s liberal Catholics, especially those more interested in social justice than in holding the Vatican’s line on sexual politics,” Gordon wrote.

“Like Francis himself, these women have been reprimanded for failing to give sufficient attention to abortion, contraception, and gay marriage. Their choice to focus instead on the needs of the poor has been met with heavy-handed behavior both from Rome and from U.S. bishops.

“If the new pope were serious about shifting the Church’s attention, one sign might be his treatment of these women… But a year and a half into his papacy, Pope Francis is looking an awful lot like his predecessors.”

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October 1, 2014

Kansas City priest sees Vatican investigation of Bishop Finn as ‘positive’

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Oct. 1, 2014

KANSAS CITY, MO. The call was unexpected, its purpose vague.

Around Sept. 16, Fr. Patrick Rush of Visitation Parish in Kansas City was contacted by a woman religious at a small convent in eastern Kansas. She said she was calling on behalf of the pope’s ambassador to the United States and that Ottawa, Ontario, Archbishop Terrence Prendergast had requested a meeting with him. The basis for it was not given.

Rush, a priest of 45 years and former vicar general for the Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., diocese, met with the archbishop and a priest taking notes Sept. 22 at the convent in Overland Park, Kan., a suburb of Kansas City. Within the first few minutes of the meeting, Rush told NCR he learned that Prendergast “was interviewing people who had written to the nuncio, both pro and con,” about the diocese and leadership of Bishop Robert Finn, on orders from Rome.

On Monday, NCR broke news of the Vatican’s investigation of Finn, which the diocese has since confirmed. Later that day, Rush first spoke about his interview with the Canadian archbishop with The Kansas City Star.

He described the hourlong meeting as “a nice back-and-forth.” Rush said he wasn’t sure why he was contacted for an interview, but said his 11 years as vicar general under Bishop Raymond Boland might have played a part. He added he had once copied the nuncio, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, on a letter to Finn, but had not written to Viganò directly regarding the bishop. …

Asked if the conversation with the Canadian archbishop touched on Finn’s misdemeanor conviction, Rush said they discussed how the accusations against former priest Shawn Ratigan were handled, what legal advice was given, and the fallout from the conviction.

“[Prendergast] basically said, ‘This is going to be difficult because I get both sides, I get two sides.’ And then he said, ‘Once I make my recommendation, there’s no guarantee that the Vatican will accept the recommendation I make, whatever the recommendation is,’ ” Rush said.

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Church of England vicar …

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

Church of England vicar who told girl, 13, to rape her nine-year-old sister in online chats is jailed for just two years

By COREY CHARLTON FOR MAILONLINE

A Church of England vicar who told a 13-year-old girl to sexually abuse her nine-year-old sister during an online chat has been jailed for just two years.

Reverend James Ogley, a married father of two young children, told the teenager he wanted her and her sister to have sex with their own mother.

In another online exchange, he told the teenager to rape her younger sibling.

Police officers discovered the clergyman’s communications when they went to the vicarage in Luton, Bedfordshire, where he lived with his family and seized his laptop computer from his study.

Ogley had been a regular visitor to the chat room for youngsters, deriving sexual gratification from the chat logs, a court was told.

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Luton vicar James Ogley asked children to commit sex offences

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A vicar who admitted asking children to sexually assault other youngsters on an internet chat blog has been jailed for two years.

Reverend James Ogley, 38, vicar at Saint Francis Church in Carteret Road, Luton, earlier pleaded guilty to seven charges of publishing obscene material.

Six offences relate to material posted online in June 2012 and one to publication in November 2012.

The Diocese of St Albans said his future had not yet been decided.

‘Sexual abuse’

Police visited the Hollybush Road vicarage in January last year after reports someone had tried to contact children via the chat room Internet Relay Chat, Luton Crown Court heard.

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SUKCES OCALONYCH, BISKUP HOSER ZAWIESIŁ PEDOFILA I ZABRAŁ SIĘ ZA DZIAŁANIE / SURVIVORS’ SUCCESS! ARCHBISHOP HOSER SUSPENDS A PEDOPHILE PRIEST AND STARTS TO TAKE ACTION.

POLSKA (POLAND)
Ocaleni

ocaleni.polska@gmail.com

Arcybiskup Hoser z diecezji warszawsko-praskiej, jak donosi Rzeczpospolita, zaczął sprzątać swoje podwórko. Już od dawna krążyły plotki, że w diecezji warszawsko-praskiej nie dzieje się dobrze pod względem poszanowania praw dzieci. Niedawno jeden z Ocalonych zgłosił swoją sprawę zarówno do władz kościelnych jak i świeckich. I mamy już efekt – znany i ceniony proboszcz K. został zawieszony w swoich obowiązkach. Jego sprawa jest w toku.

Jesteśmy dumni z Ocalonego, że podjął odpowiednie kroki i zgłosił, że był w dzieciństwie ofiarą księdza. Kochamy cię!

Oczekujemy, że oprawca nie skrzywdzi już żadnego dziecka i poniesie konsekwencje swoich czynów. Liczymy też, że jego ofiara otrzyma należytą pomoc. Apelujemy do innych potencjalnych ofiar księdza, aby się ujawniały.

Kolej na Ciebie!
—————————-
Archbishop Hoser of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Warszawa-Praga started to clean up his own backyard, Polish daily ‘Rzeczpospolita’ reports. Rumor has it that this diocese has not been respecting the children’s rights. Lately, one of our Suvivors reported his case to both the Church and secular authorities. We learned about the outcome — K. , the well-known and respected rector was suspended from his duties. His case is being reviewed.

We are extremely proud of our Suvivor! Thank you for being brave and reporting that you fell victim to clergy sexual abuse as a child. We truly love you!

We expect the abuser to face the charges and not to hurt any other child in the future. We also demand the proper support for the Survivor. It is our plea to all the victims – report your story and become a Survivor.

It’s your turn!

Text: Marysia Mucha maria.mucha@gmail.com
Translation: Daria Kikola dariakikola@gmail.com

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A Matter of Conscience: Clergy Abuse

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Museum of Fine Arts

October 4, 2014
2:00 pm – 3:00 pm
Harry and Mildred Remis Auditorium (Auditorium 161)

AUDIENCE PRICE
MFA Members $9.00
Nonmembers $11.00

A Matter of Conscience: Clergy Abuse by John J. Michalczyk and Susan A. Michalczyk (2014, 52 min.). Don’t miss this in-depth look at the courageous individuals who came forward to report clergy abuse to religious and civil authorities. Although they suffered serious repercussions, including marginalization by other religions, their words and actions demonstrate the strength of the individual when taking a stand against the abuse of power. With a new Pope pledging transparency, is it possible to believe that with significant changes comes accountability and justice?

Panel discussion follows screening.

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CATHOLIC SCHOOL ATHLETICS AND SEXUALITY

PENNSYLVANIA
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on two issues bedeviling Catholic schools:

The divide between Catholic sexual ethics and secular sexual ethics is being played out in Pennsylvania and Minnesota in a dramatic way.

The New York Times reports today that the Diocese of Harrisburg has adopted a policy barring boys on high school wrestling teams from competing with girls from other schools; girls in Catholic schools are also barred from football and rugby teams. The policy is not new: the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference Education Department has explicit rules on this subject. Indeed, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia previously dealt with this issue.

The issue in Minnesota involves transgender students. Because the Minnesota State High School League is considering a policy today that was written in part by LGBT activists—boys and girls may even be allowed to shower together—the Minnesota Catholic Conference has gotten out in front of this matter by opposing any policy that commits Catholic schools to support changes in gender identity.

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Documenting Catholic pain, Cambodia’s gain

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Loren King | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT SEPTEMBER 28, 2014

With director Tom McCarthy already in town to begin shooting “Spotlight,” about the Boston Globe’s 2002 investigation into the Catholic Church’s sexual abuse scandal involving clergy, it’s worth noting that two local documentarians have completed their latest film on the subject. John J. Michalczyk, who heads Boston College’s film studies program and whose other documentaries also focus on issues of social justice, and his wife, producer and writer Susan Michalczyk, will premiere “A Matter of Conscience: Confronting Clergy Abuse” on Oct. 4 at 2 p.m. at the Museum of Fine Arts. The new documentary, about the “Catholic whistleblowers” who reported clergy abuse to authorities and suffered retaliation from Church leaders, is a sequel to the Michalczyks’ 2013 film, “Who Takes Away the Sins . . . Witnesses to Clergy Abuse,” which also ran at the MFA. The screening of “A Matter of Conscience” will be followed by a discussion with the filmmakers.

For more information go to www.mfa.org

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Is Finn now more vulnerable? 9-30-14

UNITED STATES
Bill’s ‘Faith Matters’ Blog

Pope Francis last week fired a bishop who has been accused of protecting a priest suspected of child abuse.

Finn-1That was the good news. The bad news for people in the Kansas City area is that the bishop in question wasn’t Robert W. Finn of the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph. (Finn in this photo is seen greeting visitors to the newly refurbished downtown diocesan headquarters when it opened in 2011.)

Finn, as surely most of you know, was convicted two years ago of a misdemeanor for failing to report suspected child abuse by an area priest.

The pontiff’s action removing Bishop Rogelio Ricardo Livieres Plano from his position as head of the diocese of Ciudad del Este in Paraguay was an indication of what seems to be the pope’s growing commitment to cleaning up the priest sexual abuse scandal. He’s moving too slowly, if you ask me, and I’m not at all sure that he’s recognized all of the causes of the scandal and moved to undo them. But he’s moving in the right direction.

Indeed, The National Catholic Reporter published this story yesterday indicating that Bishop Finn finally is under investigation by the Vatican.

As the story to which I’ve linked you in the first paragraph above notes, the pope’s action against the bishop in Paraguay came shortly after his approval of the arrest in the Vatican of a former archbishop who was accused of paying for sex with children while he was a papal ambassador in the Dominican Republic.

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Ottawa archbishop investigates U.S. bishop

CANADA
Catholic Register

BY DEBORAH GYAPONG, CANADIAN CATHOLIC NEWS
October 1, 2014

OTTAWA – Ottawa Archbishop Terrence Prendergast was sent by the Vatican to investigate the bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph, according to published reports.

A report in the National Catholic Reporter (NCR) said that Prendergast interviewed several people in the Missouri diocese regarding the leadership of Bishop Robert Finn. Finn had previously been found criminally guilty of shielding a priest in a case involving child pornography.

The Ottawa archdiocese said Prendergast would have no comment on the matter.

“The archbishop considers it a private visit, so we have no comment,” said Ottawa archdiocesan communications director Sarah Du Broy in an email.

NCR reported Prendergast interviewed “more than a dozen people” about the leadership of Finn. In 2012 Finn was found guilty of a misdemeanour for failing to report former priest Shawn Ratigan, who pleaded guilty to child pornography charges earlier that year.

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Police Searching For Defrocked Priest Thought To Have Sexually Abused Hampton Bays Girl

NEW YORK
27 East

By Alexa Gorman Oct 1, 2014

A former priest wanted by police after he was accused of sexually abusing a 6-year-old Hampton Bays girl has been on the lam since the end of June, when he was questioned by Southampton Town Police and released from their custody.

The family of the victim, who is not being identified by authorities, contacted Town Police on June 28 after they suspected that longtime family friend Augusto Cortez—whose last known address was on Staten Island, although he also owns the Norbury Road home where the victim and her family have been staying in Hampton Bays—had sexually abused the girl, possibly on more than one occasion.

On June 28, a member of the victim’s family told authorities that she observed Mr. Cortez, a former Catholic priest of the Vincentian Congregation, adjusting his pants after being left alone in the room with the child during a family party at her Hampton Bays home, according to Southampton Town Detective Sergeant Lisa Costa.

He was brought in the next day, questioned by detectives and later released because they did not have enough evidence to charge him with a crime, even though they were aware that he was already on probation for inappropriately touching a 12-year-old girl at a Catholic school in Bushwick, Brooklyn, in 2008. He was kicked out of the priesthood at that time.

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Brooklyn DA Refuses to Explain Early Release of Lebovits

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

Yesterday I wrote about the surprising and distressing early release of Baruch Lebovits. This morning I emailed the public information office of the Brooklyn District Attorney.

To: PublicInfo@BrooklynDA.org
From: Yerachmiel Lopin
Date: 10/1/14
Subject: Is KCDA satisfied that Baruch Lebovits’ release conforms with the terms of the plea agreement?

The DOC records indicate that on Monday (9/29/14) Baruch Lebovits got out of Rikers on a “NYC general release.” Yet the court plea-bargain transcript show that in return for a definite sentence of two years rather than the 2-6 the DA sought, Lebovits agreed to waive his right to early release.

His release has my readers and many others in the community scratching their heads. He served 1 year and 6 days after his initial conviction in 2010 (4/12/10-4/17/11). His current stint was 83 days (7/9/14/-9/29/14) for a total of ~15 months.

If so, I and many others are left wondering if the DA office is satisfied that his early release was consistent with the sentencing terms and Judge Dwyer’s sentencing memorandum.

QUESTIONS:
Is KCDA satisfied that the sentence served is consistent with your plea bargain?
If so, did you know that this would be the outcome when you struck the deal?
The office of the DA promptly replied:

Good morning,
We have no comment on this.

Thanks,
Helen [Peterson]

There you have it. I surmise that either the DA’s office knew how short the sentence would be and didn’t care or knows that the early release was unjustified and doesn’t care to challenge it. Perhaps they even took private action to reduce the sentence. They seem to have washed their hands of any ongoing responsibility for making Lebovits at least serve one additional year for eight felony counts of oral sex with a minor. What is definitely clear is that the office is not interested in convincing orthodox abuse survivors that they are concerned about the aggressive prosecution of black-hat-on-black-hat crime.The DA is probably violating the civil rights of orthodox abuse victims by not affording them equal protection from abuse.

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Taking the Hit for Francis?

VATICAN CITY
dotCommonweal

Letter from Rome

Robert Mickens October 1, 2014

VATICAN CITY – As I was saying before I was interrupted: Pope Francis is facing resistance to the changes he’s trying to bring about inside the church. This opposition comes from the ranks of seminarians and younger priests, as well as a number of bishops.

“The resistance is coming from those that don’t want to change,” says professor Andrea Riccardi, founder of the Sant’Egidio Community here in Rome. In a recent interview he pointed out that many regular folks all over the world were still enjoying a “honeymoon” with Pope Francis. And he predicted that it would not wane quickly because it’s “much more substantial” than a mere “media phenomenon.”

Precisely because there is substance to changes the seventy-seven-year-old pope is trying to make, especially in his efforts to root out clericalism, resistance to him has grown. It is not, however, good form for priests or bishops to go around bashing the bishop of Rome. (Nor is it particularly good for one’s clerical career.) So they must select another target. That is exactly what happened during Benedict XVI’s pontificate, when the former pope’s enemies chose his secretary of state, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone as their surrogate punching bag.

Those hostile to the way Pope Francis is governing the Vatican and the universal church have placed the bull’s eye on the backs of several of his close advisers. For example, in the first weeks of Francis’s papacy, some critics tried to dig up dirt on some of the pope’s aides. But this shrewd and self-composed pope would not cave in to blackmail.

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No Longer Catholic — No Longer Quiet

UNITED STATES
Freedom from Religion Foundation

Freethought Today · Vol. 23 No. 2 March 2006

Joe McGee

My childhood and a good part of my life was stolen by a pervert masquerading as a priest.

Once, at a motivational meeting about 20 years ago, I heard the speaker make a statement that really rocked me. He said, “A friend is someone who knows everything about you and still likes you anyway.” Most people there laughed, but I felt a twinge of pain. My friends, and even my wife, did not know my deepest, darkest secret.

Not too long after that, I heard someone make the profound statement: “We are as sick as our secrets.” That also made my stomach do flip-flops.

I believe this article is long overdue. About eight or nine years ago, there was an article about me in the Denver Post, but I was anonymous in that one because I still was too afraid to put my name to my story. However, my story was published in the Denver Post on Dec. 18, 2005, with all the names and the facts. It took 50 years to summon up the courage to tell the truth.

My motive now is to try to create a little more awareness on the subject of how a person feels who has been severely abused by someone whom they believed to be next best to God/Jesus. This business of the clergy sexually molesting the faithful is nothing new. It has been going on for centuries. The hierarchy of the church has had so much power, to the point of even threatening people with excommunication, if they dared talk about priests molesting the faithful. Of course, most of the hierarchy haven’t used that tactic much for about the last 20 years. But it did work very well for them for a long time, because all good Catholics knew that excommunication from the church was a sure ticket to everlasting hell. And, if you are a good Catholic, you’re not going to take that chance. Just get back in line and keep your mouth shut if you want a shot at heaven.

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VA- Pastor’s wife gets light sentence in abuse case; SNAP responds

VIRGINIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, October 1, 2014

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

We are appalled that a pastor’s wife has been sentenced to just 10 days in jail for her involvement in a child sexual abuse case.

In many ways, those who hide child sex crimes are as culpable or perhaps even more culpable than those who commit them. Child molesters are usually sick, driven, compulsive people who have often endured some kind of horrific childhood trauma themselves. But those who are related to or work with child molesters usually are not. They make a calculated choice to protect wrongdoers and endanger kids by not calling the police when they know about or suspect child sexual abuse. They should be severely punished.

“Throwing the book” at people who help predators hurt kids is one of the best ways to stop future child sex crimes and deter future child sex cover ups. We are deeply disappointed in the light sentence this woman has received and hope that Virginia law enforcement officials will do better next time.

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NY- Franciscan brother accused of sexual abuse, SNAP responds

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, October 01, 2014

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

A New York Franciscan brother has been removed from his position following allegations that he sexually abused a student. We are grateful to the brave victim who came forward and reported these allegations.

When victims report their abuse, they not only encourage others who are suffering in silence and self blame to speak up. They also, by exposing an alleged predator, make other kids safe.

Brother Dominic Quigley is accused of sexually abusing a boy while teaching at St. Francis Prep in Queens. Quigley had been working at American Martyrs Catholic Church in Bayside, Queens. St. Francis Prep was the subject of an unrelated lawsuit for allegedly ignoring the sexual abuse of a football coach.

We hope anyone else who might have seen, suspects, or suffered sexual abuse by Quigley or any other Catholic official will find the courage to speak up, report to secular officials and start healing.

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MO- Vatican investigates Kansas City bishop, SNAP responds

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, September 29, 2014

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

What is to investigate? Years ago, Finn was found guilty of breaking the law and knowingly and repeatedly hiding evidence of child sex crimes from police. Because of his selfish and callous crime, more innocent little girls and their families were hurt by then Fr. Shawn Rattigan. Both Francis and Benedict should have ousted and defrocked Finn long ago. Doesn’t common sense and human decency strongly suggest that Finn has no place in ministry?

Secular investigations trump church “investigations” If Francis wants to investigate complicit church officials, there are plenty who merit it. He need not start with one whose guilt has been clearly proven. Francis is doing with Finn what Benedict did with Maciel. It is not enough to grudgingly and belatedly take timid steps against a wrong doer only after his crimes have created an ongoing international controversy. The Pope must be proactive and stern, not reactive and trepid. He must harshly and publicly discipline a number of corrupt, “enabling” church officials if he really intends to protect kids and deter cover-ups.

[National Catholic Reporter]

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Diocese Bars Girls From Playing Contact Sports With Boys

PENNSYLVANIA
The New York Times

By MARY PILON
SEPT. 30, 2014

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg in Pennsylvania has adopted a policy requiring boys on its school wrestling teams to forfeit matches against female opponents, school officials said Tuesday. The policy also barred girls from joining Catholic school tackle football and rugby teams.

The policy said that boys and girls competing together in sports that involve “substantial and potentially immodest physical contact” would conflict with the diocese’s religious mission.

Safety and modesty were at the root of the policy change, Joe Aponick, communications director for the diocese, said Tuesday. “For students, we think about the mind, body and spirit,” he said. “It’s a holistic approach. When we look at the athletic field, that doesn’t exist on its own. It’s an extension of the classroom. That’s where the modesty piece comes in.”

The policy prohibiting participation by both sexes in the three sports went into effect in July. It was first reported Tuesday by WITF, a radio station in Harrisburg.

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PA- Bishop bans boy/girl sports contact; SNAP responds

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, October 01, 2014

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

Harrisburg Bishop Ronald Gainer has barred boys and girls from competing against one another in school contact sports.

Gainer should focus first on protecting boys and girls from predator priests Here’s what we said when he was first appointed to head the Harrisburg diocese:

The Vatican has made another depressing appointment by promoting Lexington Bishop Ronald Gainer to head the Harrisburg diocese. In fact, this may be Pope Francis’ most distressing promotion yet.

Gainer has done a very poor job protecting kids and healing victims in Lexington.

1) Just last year, we begged Gainer to oust – and warn his flock about – a four-time accused predator priest who works, basically unsupervised, in the Lexington diocese. He is Fr. Carroll Howlin, who lives unmonitored and “ministers” in eastern Kentucky in apparent violation of a Vatican order and the church’s national abuse policy.

Late year, the Chicago Tribune reported that Fr. Howlin, suspended for sexually abusing Illinois boys, still lives and works – unsupervised – in McCreary County. The cleric has reportedly also molested two Kentucky boys, one of whom committed suicide.

Fr. Howlin, according to the Chicago Tribune, allegedly used money to garner sexual favors from impoverished boys.

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High court to hear religious man’s child abuse case

MISSOURI
News-Leader

Stephen Herzog, News-Leader September 28, 2014

Missouri’s Supreme Court will hear arguments this week regarding whether a Springfield man who practiced a certain type of Christianity is guilty of abusing his children.

Peter D. Hansen, 50, was convicted by a jury in 2011 of abusing one of his children by locking him in a bathroom “for days at a time” and restricting what the child could eat. Judge Dan Conklin suspended a three-year prison sentence and placed Hansen on five years probation with 100 days in the Greene County Jail.

Hansen, who is a Seventh Day Adventist, argues that his religion encourages vegetarianism and that the punishment of his children does not constitute child abuse.

Court records show Hansen was married and had two children from a previous marriage. The family was evicted from their home in April 2009 and lived in a car for a couple of weeks before their local church allowed them to live in the building.

“The family had little money, but continued to live by the principles of their church in that environment, eating mostly vegetables, grains, legumes and some fruit, two meals a day, drinking water and exercising,” Hansen’s appeal says.

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MO- Citing religion, dad withholds food from kids; SNAP responds

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2014

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

Today, the Missouri Supreme Court hears the case of a Seventh Day Adventist who withheld food from his kids as a punishment. We hope the court upholds the child abuse sentence against the man.

In his defense, the father is citing his religious convictions.

People can believe anything. They cannot, however, do anything, especially to innocent, vulnerable kids. Nearly all belief is legally protected. All behavior is not. We as a civilized society must safeguard children from extremists who cloak their wrongdoing in religious terms.

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Jerry Brown vetoes victims’ civil rights bill

CALIFORNIA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on October 1, 2014

In case you were wondering who Jerry Brown REALLY wants to protect: Yesterday, Brown vetoed SB 924, a bill which would have given victims of child sexual abuse until age 40 to file civil lawsuits against organizations that cover up and abet child sexual abuse. The bill was entirely prospective, meaning that it would only apply to victims who were abused AFTER the passage of the bill.

He did, however, lengthen the criminal statute of limitations for child sexual abuse. This is good news and it will put criminals behind bars. But by vetoing the civil law, Brown is ensuring that organizations that cover up abuse—groups like the Boy Scouts, US Gymnastics, US Swimming, and his beloved Catholic Church—will never be held accountable for their crimes. With that being the case, what deterrent will these organizations have to change their behavior? Because common decency and morality have not been working thus far. We know that Brown habitually meets with representatives of the Catholic Conference. Too bad he’s never met with a victim of the church … or US Swimming … or the Boy Scouts … Shameful.

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Religious order moved serial sex abuser to Africa despite crimes at Rubane House

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The De La Salle religious order moved a serial sex abuser to Africa, in 1982, despite being aware of his crimes at a boys home in County Down.

The senior brother had previously been moved out of Rubane House, where he abused young boys, and became principal of a school in Downpatrick.

The details were revealed at the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry.

It is examining allegations of abuse at Rubane House in Kircubbin.

About 200 former residents have made allegations of abuse.

The inquiry also heard the De La Salle Religious Order paid compensation to victims who were sexually abused at Rubane House within years of the order ruling that a previous investigation into their abuser was “best forgotten”.

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Scrappy prosecutor: Vatican should turn over ex bishop

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- Despite welcoming Pope Francis’ decision of house arrest of former Vatican envoy Józef Wesolowski, National District prosecutor Yeni Berenice Reynoso on Tuesday said for the victims and Dominican society, justice would be served if the Holy See renounces its privilege of jurisdiction established by the Vienna Convention, to prosecute the defrocked senior prelate here.

Reynoso said while the Convention bestows the Vatican with the legal right to prosecute Wesolowski in its territory, the Holy See can waive that right.

The official, whose scrappy style has ruffled feathers of even her own superiors, said it’s ethical when the victims participate in the proceeding and learn firsthand about the course of the investigation.

In that regard, Reynoso said thus far, no one has proposed to compensate for the damages to four teenagers allegedly sexually abused by the former Nuncio in the Dominican Republic during his more than three years in the post.

She said she was particularly impacted by testimony of one of the abused boys, whose disease she affirms Wesolowski used to exchange drugs he needed for sexual favors. “For me that’s an act of extreme perversion.”

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We deserve an explanation

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

by Adam Trimingham

THE Catholic Church in Sussex has found itself at the centre of controversy again, following the resignation of Kieran Conry, the Bishop of Arundel and Brighton.

Parishioners were told in churches on Sunday that the Bishop was quitting because he had been unfaithful to his promises.

It was bad enough that he should have set such an appalling example to thousands of Catholics who previously regarded him with admiration.

But what made it worse was that the Bishop felt unable to tell them exactly how he had broken his clerical vows.

Churchgoers would understand some restraint on his part in naming any names, but they surely have a right to a clear and honest statement from him.

It is not enough simply to say no children were involved and that he has not broken the law.

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Missbrauch vertuscht: Vatikan ermittelt gegen US-Bischof

ROM/KANSAS CITY (MO)
Tiroler Tageszeitung (Osterreich)

Rom – Nach der Verhaftung des früheren vatikanischen Botschafters in der Dominikanischen Republik, Jozef Wesolowski, wegen des Verdachts auf sexuellen Missbrauchs von Minderjährigen ist der Vatikan immer stärker mit dem Problem der Pädophilie konfrontiert. Der Vatikan ermittelt gegen Bischof Robert Finn von der Diözese Kansas City-Saint Joseph, berichtete die Tageszeitung La Repubblica am Mittwoch.

Die Informationen wurde vom vatikanischen Pressesprecher, Pater Federico Lombardi, nicht kommentiert. Finn wird vorgeworfen, Fälle von sexuellem Missbrauch von Kindern durch einen ihm untergebenen Priester nicht gemeldet zu haben. Gegen ihn wurde bereits in den USA ermittelt. Der Bischof hatte bisher stets zurückgewiesen, sich strafbar gemacht zu haben. Er hatte allerdings eingeräumt, von eindeutigen Fotos gewusst zu haben, die der Priester von einigen jungen Mädchen gemacht habe.

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Missbrauch liegt sechs Jahre zurück

LUXEMBOURG
Tageblatt

[The message struck on Tuesday like a bomb. Serious allegations of sexual abuse of a minor have been made against a priest in Luxembourg. The priest has been suspended by the archbishop and a criminal investigation is in progress. He has been questioned by police. The priest served for several years in Pfarrverband Belair-Merl-Zessingen. The alleged assault happened six years ago. The statute of limitations for abuse is 10 years. First incidents of sexual abuse by clergy surfaced in 2010 and some of them went back 30 years or more. This is the most recent cases of sexual abuse in the Catholic church of Luxembourg. A hotline has been set-up was set up and within a year 138 people report abuse.]

Die Meldung schlug am Dienstag wie eine Bombe ein. Und es sind schwere Vorwürfe: “Zurzeit wird ein Priester der Erzdiözese wegen eines unsittlichen Vergehens an einer zur Tatzeit minderjährigen Person verhört,” schrieb das erzbischöfliche Ordinariat. Der Mann wurde vom Erzbischof vom Dienst suspendiert. Der betroffene erstattete gegen sich selbst Strafanzeige. Am gleichen Tag wurde er von der Kriminalpolizei zu den Vorwürfen vernommen.

Was genau dem Mann vorgeworfen wird, wollte Minkus allerdings nicht sagen. Auch zum Alter des Kindes damals schweigt man sich aus. Auch der Erzbischof Jean-Claude Hollerich schweigt. Der Priester war seit mehreren Jahren im Pfarrverband Belair-Merl-Zessingen aktiv. Der Fall von dem sexuellen Übergriff auf einen damals Minderjährigen liegt sechs Jahre zurück, heißt es auf Nachfrage bei Justizsprecher Henri Eippers gegenüber Tageblatt.lu. Die Verjährungsfrist bei Missbrauch liegt bei zehn Jahren.

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