ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

March 19, 2014

Lutheran minister busted for child porn, St. Charles County detectives say

MISSOURI
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By Susan Weich sweich@post-dispatch.com 636-493-96741

ST. CHARLES COUNTY • A Lutheran pastor is in jail after detectives with the county’s cyber crimes unit raided his home Tuesday and discovered child pornography on his computer, police say.

Matthew D. Luetke, 35, of the 5000 block of Danielle Drive, was charged today with promoting child pornography. He had been under investigation since December, when undercover detectives began trading child pornography with him, police said.

Luetke has been a pastor at Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church, 8425 Mexico Road, for about a year, police say. Before that he worked at churches in Wisconsin and Minnesota. Police say he had no previous criminal record.

A day care at the church is attended by about 50 children, police said, but they do not suspect Luetke had any improper contact with any of the children. The church is sending out a letter to parents about the arrest as a precaution, police said.

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

St. Peters pastor arrested on pornography charge

MISSOURI
KPIR

March 19, 2014, by Chris Smith, updated on: 02:31pm, March 19, 2014

ST. CHARLES COUNTY, MO (KTVI) – The St. Charles County Cyber Crime Task Force has arrested 35-year-old Matthew D. Luetke in reference to a child pornography investigation. Luetke is the pastor at the Good Shepard Evangelical Luther Church located on Mexico Road in St. Peters.

Luetke was arrested after a search warrant was executed at his home in St. Charles. He’s charged with one count of promoting child pornography and his bond has been set at $100,000.

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.

Missouri pastor charged with child porn possession

MISSOURI
KY3

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports that Matthew Luetke, 36, was charged Wednesday with promoting child pornography as part of an undercover investigation that began in December. His cash-only bail was set at $100,000.

Luetke is a pastor at Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church in O’Fallon and previously worked at churches in Wisconsin and Minnesota. The evangelical church has its own daycare center, but police say they don’t suspect Luetke had any improper contact with children there. Church officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

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.

St. Charles County pastor charged in child porn investigation

MISSOURI
KSDK

ST. CHARLES, Mo. (KSDK) – The St. Charles County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office charged a 35-year-old area pastor in reference to a child pornography investigation.

According to court documents, the St. Charles County Cyber Crime Task Force searched a home in the 5000 block of Danielle Drive for evidence of child pornography. Authorities found on a computer nine images of young girls between the ages of 9 and 13 in various poses and exposing themselves.

Prosecutors said the homeowner, identified as Matthew Luetke, confessed to being the sole operator of said computer, adding he’d developed a habit of viewing child pornography. Luetke further admitted to touching himself while viewing said images.

Luetke, a pastor at the Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church in O’Fallon, told police he had exposed himself and allowed his genitals to be touched by female relatives when they were pre-school age when the family was living in Wisconsin and Minnesota. Those incidents are said to have occurred between 2004 and 2008.

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.

MO–St. Charles minister arrested

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 19

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

We are very sad to learn that an O’Fallon MO minister admits child sex abuse and child porn. And we’re surprised and disappointed that police are already suggesting there are no local victims.

[KSDK]

Often, authorities want to quickly put worried parents at ease. But we believe that premature complacency is dangerous. We believe everyone should keep open minds here and not rule out that Rev. Matthew Luetke may have hurt kids here in Missouri as he did in Minnesota and Wisconsin.

We hope that every single person who attends or works at Good Shepherd Evangelical Lutheran Church

– or went or worked there in the past – will find the courage to call police right away if they saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes or cover ups there.

(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 15,000 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)

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

Former Greenwich priest named in victims’ group petition

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

Daniel Tepfer
Published 7:03 pm, Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Bishop Frank Caggiano has agreed to meet with representatives of national and local victim support groups who Wednesday called for him to hire an outside firm to investigate two priests who have been accused in the past of sex abuse — including a former prominent Greenwich pastor has who admitted he hid more than 40 years of abuse complaints.

But Barbara Blaine, president of the Chicago-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said although she is willing to meet with Caggiano, she would prefer to do so after he agrees to the investigation.

“History has shown that meetings don’t always bear fruit, but actions speak louder than words,” Blaine said.

It would be the first time that a bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport agreed to meet with SNAP.

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.

BROTHER HARTMAN ON TRIAL

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

March 19, 2014 3:21 pm | Author: berger

Brother Bernard Joseph Hartman of the St. Louis-based Marianists (the group that runs Chaminade and Vianney High Schools), goes on trial this week in Australia on charges of molesting four girls. In recent years, he lived in our town and also worked in Pittsburgh and Dayton. Hartman is accused of sexually abusing at least four children at St. Paul’s College between 1976 and 1982.

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

Review: A Diary of Disconnect

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on March 19, 2014

Book Review: The Vatican Diaries: A Behind the Scenes Look at the Power, Personalities, and Politics at the Heart of the Catholic Church; by John Thavis. Penguin Books

A year after the hardcover publication of The Vatican Diaries (a book whose hardcover release date coincided with the resignation of Pope Benedict XXIII XVI and the election of Pope Francis—a marketing and sales extravaganza if ever there were one), John Thavis‘ chronicle of Vatican shenanigans is now out in paperback.

A new afterward by the author is the icing on this cupcake of a book—a sweet, delectable, slightly naughty look inside the Vatican: a patchwork of quirky and outdated personalities tied together by allegiance, clericalism, protocol, and theater. While none of these things are very good for Catholics, clergy sex abuse victims or the Vatican state, Thavis expertly shows how the Vatican’s incompetency, callousness and failures reside in its humanity and its all-too-human worship of the most seductive power of all: information.

Thavis spent more than 25 years as a member of the Vaticanista, the group of journalists charged with covering the Vatican, the pope and other news surrounding the Holy See. As a writer for the Catholic News Service, Thavis was forced to balance the very delicate line between journalistic integrity and his own Catholicism.

He didn’t have an easy job. Without decent access to information or (the sometimes-kept) promises of transparency in many western governments, journalists covering the Vatican are forced to follow a path reminiscent of the childhood game of telephone. It’s about knowing the right person to call, capitalizing on people’s hot buttons, and most importantly, knowing whom to believe. Imagine The National Enquirer with all of the couture, but none of the good looks.

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.

Youth ministry intern held on child molestation charges

GEORGIA
Dawson News

By Jennifer Sami, regional staff
editor@dawsonnews.com
UPDATED: March 19, 2014

CUMMING – A church youth ministry intern remained in the Forsyth County Detention Center on Wednesday following his arrest on felony counts of child molestation and enticing a child for indecent purposes.

According to the Forsyth County Sheriff’s Office, 28-year-old Sean E. Paul of Dawsonville turned himself in Friday. No bond has been set.

In addition to the two felony counts, he also faces one misdemeanor charge of electronically furnishing obscene material to a minor.

Paul was an intern for the youth minister at First Christian Church on Sawnee Drive in Cumming.

Stan Percival, the lead pastor of the church, said Paul “immediately resigned” from the position, which he had held for less than a year, when confronted with the allegations.

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.

Al Jazeera America Presents: “Holy Money”

UNITED STATES
Al Jazeera America

The Pope is not only the shepherd of a billion faithful. He is also the head of a business empire of global dimensions that employs millions of people. The Holy Roman Church owns hospitals and universities, gold stocks and works of art of inestimable value. It attracts donations from all over the world, owns huge swathes of very expensive real estate both in the USA, in Italy and in some very surprising places. Today, the Catholic Church is the richest religious institution in the world but it also has an extremely high rate of financial crimes. The “affairs” have shaken the confidence of Catholics around the world, and have involved the highest levels of the Vatican as well as small local parishes.

In fact, the money scandals were at the heart of the most anti establishment conclave in nearly 100 years. A cabal of cardinals demanded change. They got Pope Francis and his mission is to clean up the finances of the church, get rid of the rotten apples and prune the trees that bore them. Today, heads are rolling on St. Peter’s square. But the stumbling blocks on the road to Pope Francis’s newly announced reform are considerable and the stakes are sky high for all the parties involved in the Church’s finances.

Led by University College London Historian John Dickie, this documentary goes into the pockets of the Holy Father to reveal the money issues facing the Catholic Church. Through the stories of the most recent scandals, his investigation exposes the Church’s tortuous relationship with money: from the USA where a cardinal has allegedly concealed assets to reduce the compensation of victims of child abuse to a religious congregation that traded real estate for political favour; from a monsignor arrested for money laundering to the embezzling of Sunday donations.

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.

Nunavut court: still no end in sight for Dejaeger trial

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

DAVID MURPHY

The trial of ex-Nunavut priest Eric Dejaeger will likely adjourn for a third time as lawyers continue to wrangle over the admission of certain pieces of evidence.

The court was supposed to hear final arguments and conclude the trial by March 21, but that doesn’t look possible now.

That’s because Crown prosecutors presented Justice Robert Kilpatrick with a third application March 19 to have the court consider certain evidence.

In this one, Crown prosecutor Barry Nordin seeks permission to have what’s called similar fact evidence admitted in the case.

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

VIDEO: Cardinal Timothy Dolan visits Albany, lobbies for tax credit

NEW YORK
Saratogian

By Michael Hill, The Associated Press
POSTED: 03/19/14

ALBANY >> New York City Cardinal Timothy Dolan and bishops from around the state made a lobbying push at the Capitol on Tuesday for a long-sought tax credit that could save Catholic schools from shuttering.

Dolan and the bishops met with Gov. Andrew Cuomo and legislative leaders to advocate for a tax credit for charitable donations made for educational purposes. The legislation would eventually be worth up to $300 million a year, with half going to public school programs and half going to scholarships for students who attend private schools.

Supporters believe the fresh infusion of scholarship money could save some struggling Catholic schools and help students in all types of schools.

“We’re not talking about different schools — charters, public, Catholic, Jewish, private. No. we’re talking about our kids. Our kids are going to benefit from this,” Dolan said, surrounded by lawmakers and bishops at a news conference.

Though a version of the measure has been approved in the state Senate, it has met resistance in the Democrat-led state Assembly. Supporters, which also include some labor unions, believe they can improve their chances of passage by folding the measure into the state budget due April 1.

Opponents claim the measure would not add money to education, but instead siphon it away from a finite pool of state money. Richard Iannuzzi, president of the New York State United Teachers union, likened it to a voucher system.

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

NY- Victims blast Catholic bishops lobbying effort

NEW YORK
Survivor Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Statement by Mary Caplan of New York City, SNAP Leader, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 917 439 4187, mcaplan682@aol.com )

New York’s Catholic bishops – including Cardinal Tim Dolan – are trying to get more tax breaks through a proposed bill about schools. Lawmakers should think long and hard before agreeing to this.

[Saratogian]

When they want money for their institutions, Catholic officials lobby hard and say they care deeply about kids. But when kids who were abused want a chance for justice, Catholic officials lobby hard to deny those kids their day in court. All across the US, Dolan and his brother bishops use all their political will and power and resources to block moves to reform archaic, predator-friendly statute of limitation laws that endanger kids and protect those who commit and conceal heinous child sex crimes.

[New York Times]

For at least three reasons, public schools are inherently safer than private schools. There is more openness and more accountability in public schools than private schools. And there’s less incentive to ignore or conceal child sex crimes in public schools than private schools.

First, law enforcement and fiscal authorities can more readily and easily audit and investigate public schools than private schools.

Second, citizens and journalists can better gain access to records in public schools than private schools.

Third, public school parents can attend and speak at regular, public school board meetings. They can oust board members, back other candidates, and run for those positions themselves.

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.

Why Catholic officials are “picked on” about abuse

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY DAVID CLOHESSY ON MARCH 19, 2014

Fr. John Geoghan may be America’s most prolific predator priest, with at least 150 victims over a 36 year clerical career. (He’s not, however, the most efficient. That distinction goes to Mexico’s Fr. Nicholas Aguilar Rivera who, in just 10 months in Los Angeles, reportedly assaulted 26 kids.)

This year is the 60 year anniversary of perhaps the first “red flag” Catholic officials had about Geoghan. In 1954, the rector of Geoghan’s seminary expressed doubts about his suitability for the priesthood, in part because the seminarian was “decidedly immature.”

It’s also the 25 year anniversary of Cardinal Bernard Law sending Geoghan to St. Luke’s Institute (one of at least three treatment centers where Geoghan spent time), where he was diagnosed as “high risk.” Of course, he was still put back on the job in an unsuspecting parish.

And it’s the 15 year anniversary of a 1994 Boston archdiocesan memo, labeled “confidential,” that said that Geoghan would stay in a parishioner’s home who had eight kids “even when he was on a three day retreat because he missed the kids so much.” He “would touch them while they were sleeping and waken them by playing with their penises.”

(Incidentally, last year was the 50th anniversary of Paraclete founder Fr. Gerald’s Fitzgerald’s letter to the pope advocating “Laicization for any priest, upon objective evidence, for tampering with the virtue of the young” noting that “real conversions will be found to be extremely rare” and “leaving them on duty or wandering from diocese to diocese is contributing to scandal.” His advice was obviously ignored.)

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.

Court of Criminal Appeal reserves judgement …

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Court of Criminal Appeal reserves judgement on appeal by ‘Singing priest’ and serial child abuser Tony Walsh

PUBLISHED 19 MARCH 2014

The Court of Criminal Appeal has reserved judgment in the case of former priest and serial child abuser Tony Walsh, who is appealing against separate sentences of 16 years and 15 months imposed on him for the rape and sexual abuse of young boys in the nineteen seventies and eighties.

Walsh, who was known as the “Singing Priest” for his role in a travelling all-priest vocal group before he was defrocked, is serving a 16-year sentence imposed on him in 2010 for the rape and abuse of three school boys.

The 59-year-old had pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to two counts of indecently assaulting a male in a west Dublin church between November 1978 and April 1979.

He pleaded guilty to a further charge of indecently assaulting a male in a west Dublin school between January 1984 and December 1985.

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

OH- Ohio civil offender registry isn’t working; SNAP responds

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 19, 2014

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

A “civil registry” of child molesters set up eight years ago by Ohio lawmakers has never been used, the Columbus Dispatch reports today.

[Columbus Dispatch]

The “civil registry” isn’t working because it’s an obscure, untested, and likely unconstitutional process that would require suffering child sex abuse victims to pay thousands of dollars to a lawyer, with no chance to even recover their costs, little chance of exposing their predator and no chance to expose the colleagues and supervisors who concealed their predator’s crimes.

It was a desperate move designed to give lawmakers ‘political cover’ and enable them to pretend they were doing something to stop child molesters.

On the contrary, the “civil window” that we’ve long advocated has since been adopted – and successfully used – in Delaware, Hawaii and Minnesota to protect kids by exposing those who commit and conceal heinous sex crimes against kids and deterring such wrongdoing in the future.

Now that it’s clear Ohio’s half-baked “civil registry” hasn’t helped expose a single predator, we hope lawmakers will reconsider reforming the state’s archaic, predator-friendly child sex laws and make it less difficult for those who were raped and sodomized as kids to take legal action against their perpetrators.

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.

Fetalvero: A matter of faith

PHILIPPINES
Sun.Star

By Noemi C. Fetalvero
Two empty bottles

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

RELIGION and faith are two intertwined subjects that may be considered very personal to an individual. Although I am taking a personal stance on the matter, I am sure hundreds of parishioners are affected by a certain issue.

Since the Archdiocese of Cebu decided to give clergymen under its pastoral care a second chance (meaning those priests found to have broken their vows, given a different parish assignment instead of being suspended). The consideration, I believe, has been abused by some priests.

In Jan. 16, I went to see Archbishop of Cebu Jose Palma to report a priest assigned in the southern part of Cebu who, I believe, was living a double life. In some days of the week, the clergyman functions as a parish priest. However, from Mondays through Wednesdays he is a regular visitor of a residential house where he is being introduced to neighbors as a husband and a father of two children. The children are both adults now.

Palma said he will look into it, saying that the church follows a certain protocol with regards to matters like these.

Months have passed and Bishop Palma has not met with the Board of Consultors who will create the investigating body to make the inquiry vis-à-vis the report.

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.

Police pressured by archbishop to extradite pedophile bus driver

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MARK SCHLIEBS AND LOUIS MAYFIELD THE AUSTRALIAN MARCH 20, 2014

POLICE acted at the behest of Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson in extraditing pedophile bus driver Brian Perkins in 2002 after earlier refusing attempts to bring him to justice in South Australia, the royal commission into child abuse heard yesterday.

South Australian child abuse investigator Detective Sergeant Gregory Ramm also told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that child pornography involving people linked to St Ann’s Special School in Adelaide was seized in Britain but never properly investigated.

Local detectives weren’t granted time to investigate “thousands” of photographs and videos received by police in 1993, he said, because of an order from the late assistant commissioner Colin Watkins that was later subject of an internal corruption investigation. The inquiry heard anti-corruption branch investigators did not criticise Watkins for shutting down Operation Deny – an investigation into an Adelaide-based international pedophilia ring – in their final report.

Perkins – who abused and produced pornography of several intellectually disabled children from St Ann’s between 1986-91 – was extradited from Queensland in 2002, 11 years after police seized photographs of students at his home. Sergeant Ramm said senior police and the Director of Public Prosecutions knocked back his recommendation to have Perkins extradited in 1998 because it was deemed too expensive.

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.

Father Joe LeClair sentenced to a year in jail

CANADA
CBC News

A popular Ottawa priest who stole $130,000 from his church will spend one year in jail for his crimes.

Father Joe LeClair, a diagnosed pathological gambler, pleaded guilty to defrauding Ottawa’s Blessed Sacrament Church of the money over the course of five years.

He was sentenced to one year in jail and one year probation in an Ottawa courtroom on Wednesday morning, with Ontario Court Justice Jack Nadelle saying that breach of trust and the amount of money played into his decision.

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.

Father Joe Leclair jailed 1 year for stealing from his parish

CANADA
Ottawa Sun

BY MEGAN GILLIS OTTAWA SUN

Father Joseph LeClair going to jail for one year for what a judge Wednesday called a serious breach of trust by a pathological gambler.

Blessed Sacrament Church’s popular former priest pleaded guilty in January to fraud and theft charges related to a five-year, $130,000 fraud on his church.

A psychiatrist diagnosed LeClair, 56, as a pathological gambler, but not all of his thieving had to do with gambling.

For instance, cut himself a $5,700 cheque to cover the cost of a vacation. He also directed that fees for the church’s marriage preparation courses be paid in cash. Over the five-year fraud only $13,000 of what should have been $157,000 in revenue made it into church bank accounts; LeClair later admitted some of the money went to gambling debts.

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.

MA- Fundraiser set for clergy sex victims’ group

BOSTON (MA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, March 19, 2014

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

Fundraiser set for victims’ group
In honor of SNAP 25th anniversary
Group’s founder & president will speak

Massachusetts Citizens for Children is hosting a lecture and fundraiser this Sunday (March 23) to mark and honor the 25th anniversary of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

The event will be held at New England Law (classroom 301), 154 Stuart Street in Boston MA from 3:00 to 5:00 pm. Admission is a donation to SNAP (suggested amount is $25).

Barbara Blaine of Chicago, who founded SNAP, will speak. Other speakers include Vince Warren, Executive Director of Center for Constitutional Rights and retired Detroit Bishop Tom Gumbleton. Warren’s group helped SNAP submit testimony to the International Criminal Court and the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child about the Catholic Church’s child sex abuse and cover up scandal.

Gumbleton is the only Catholic prelate in the US to acknowledge having been molested as a child himself. He has helped SNAP lobby for legislative reforms that make it easier for child sex abuse victims to file lawsuits.

“We are deeply grateful to our friends at Massachusetts Citizens for Children for supporting us and for their outstanding work to protect kids too,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP’s director.

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

Church pushed police to extradite abuser

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A paedophile school bus driver was extradited to Adelaide in 2002 only after pressure was put on police by the city’s Catholic Archbishop Philip Wilson, a royal commission has heard.

The Adelaide Archdiocese even offered to fund the extradition, after a top police officer, because of budgetary constraints, rejected a 1998 application to extradite Brian Perkins from Queensland.

Perkins sexually abused intellectually disabled boys between 1986 and 1991.

In 2002 Detective Sergeant Leonid Mosheev was told there was a direction from the Police Commissioner to bring Perkins back, he testified to the commission on Wednesday.

This came about because of pressure from the Archbishop Wilson who had visited the police commissioner, he said.

Beliefs about problems associated with evidence from an intellectually disabled boy were also part of the reason for the decision not to pursue the extradition, Det Sgt Mosheev said.

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

The English Catholic Church and the Sex Abuse Crisis

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Wed, 19 Mar 2014 by Richard Scorer

In England, Catholic leaders have fostered the impression that the English church has been relatively scandal-free, and that such problems as did exist were eliminated by the Nolan reforms. A new book by Richard Scorer, head of the abuse unit at Slater & Gordon lawyers, interrogates that claim.

The excellent campaigning work by the NSS on the Catholic abuse crisis has focussed on the Vatican, and with good reason: the Vatican stands at the apex of the worldwide Catholic Church, a uniquely centralised institution, and the Vatican must bear primary responsibility for the culture of denial and cover up which has now been exposed in Catholic institutions around the world. But in challenging the Vatican, we should not overlook events nearer home. In England, Catholic leaders have fostered the impression that the English church has been relatively scandal-free, and that such problems as did exist were eliminated by the Nolan reforms, a raft of changes to child protection introduced in 2001. In my book Betrayed: The English Catholic Church and the Sex Abuse Crisis, published on 27 March, I interrogate that claim. By examining the detail of cases over a 50 year period, I show that the patterns of institutional denial and cover-up that have characterised the Catholic abuse scandal in other parts of the world have been pervasive here too.

I also examine whether the Catholic Church in England has dealt successfully with past problems, as it claims. Underlying this issue is a tension between the secular approach to child protection and the approach mandated by canon law, the internal law of the Catholic Church.

At the heart of modern child protection is the ‘paramountcy principle’. This is the legal principle that the interests of children have primacy and so (for example) if a person is suspected on credible evidence of abusing children he/she may be suspended from contact with children whilst a full investigation takes place. Canon law operates very differently: a priest cannot be suspended without a full canonical trial and a verdict meeting the standard of ‘moral certainty’. That canonical trial, of course, would be presided over, in secret, by the suspect’s fellow priests, so as a mechanism for dealing with abuse allegations canon law is inherently unsuitable.

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.

“Das Grundvertrauen bleibt”

DEUTSCHLAND
Domradio

[Summary: Jesuit priest Klaus Mertes has received an award from the Herbert-Haag Foundation. He revealed the biggest case of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.]

Klaus Mertes hat den Preis der Herbert-Haag-Stiftung erhalten. Der Jesuitenpater machte einen der größten Missbrauchsfälle in der katholischen Kirche publik. Im Interview spricht der Rektor des Kollegs St. Blasien darüber, wie ihn das Thema verändert hat.

KNA: Pater Mertes, was bedeutet Ihnen die soeben erhaltene Auszeichnung?

Mertes: Der Preis bedeutet für mich eine Stärkung auf einem langen Weg. Es ist eine Stärkung aus dem Raum der Kirche, sozusagen von den “eigenen Leuten”. Das tut gut. Ein bisschen beschämt bin ich auch, weil ich weiß, dass nicht ich es war, der mit der Aufdeckungsarbeit begonnen hat, sondern die Opfer. Und weil ich auch weiß, dass ich ohne die Unterstützung vieler Mitbrüder und der Kolleginnen und Kollegen an unseren Schulen die Anstrengungen der letzten Jahre nicht durchgehalten hätte.

KNA: Die Herbert-Haag-Stiftung zeichnet Personen aus, die sich durch mutiges Handeln exponiert haben. 2010 thematisierten Sie in einem Brief an ehemalige Berliner Jesuitenschüler sexuellen Missbrauch durch zwei Patres, die als Lehrer und Seelsorger tätig waren. Brauchte es dafür Mut?

Mertes: Dazu brauchte ich keinen Mut. Das war ganz klar, dass ich auf das Gehörte antworten musste. Und ich wollte es auch. Ich ahnte jedoch nicht, was für Folgen das über meinen kleinen Gesichtskreis hinaus haben würde.

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.

Innocence stolen by man of God: Vic victim

AUSTRALIA
Australian Teacher Magazine

MELBOURNE, March 19 – A man allegedly abused by a Catholic Brother says he is still suffering more than 30 years after his innocence was stolen by a man of God.

American Brother Bernard Joseph Hartman, 74, allegedly abused two boys and two girls at Altona where he was a teacher at St Paul’s College between 1976 and 1982.

One of the victims told the Melbourne Magistrates Court the scars are still with him.

“In Year 11 in 1982 I wanted to kill him,” the man said in his victim statement to the court.

“I have lived a hard life because of my upbringing, all because of Brother Hartman.

“After more than 30 years I am still suffering.

“My innocence has been taken by a man of God.”

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

Catholic Brother accused of child sex abuse was a sadist: court hears

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By court reporter Sarah Farnsworth

American Marianist Brother Bernard Hartman will stand trial over allegations he abused four children while a teacher at St Paul’s College in Melbourne more than 30 years ago.

Hartman is facing 18 charges, including indecent assault, act of gross indecency and assault dating back to the 1970s and 1980s

It is alleged Brother Hartman sexually assaulted two girls in their homes after he befriended their families.

He is also alleged to have molested two students at the all boys college.

One of his former students told a committal hearing in the Melbourne Magistrates Court, the biology teacher was a “Jekyll and Hyde type of person.”

The court heard he would regularly molest him and then beat him up.

“He was a bit of a sadist,” the man told the court.

“Mostly every time he abused me sexually, he would finish up physically belting me.

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Full story: How the church concealed Father Ridsdale’s crimes

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (updated 18 March 2014)

This Broken Rites article is the most comprehensive account available about how the Catholic Church harboured this child-abuser – Father Gerald Francis Ridsdale – for 30 years while his superiors and fellow-priests remained silent to protect the church’s public image. Gradually some of his victims, encouraged by Broken Rites, have spoken to detectives in the Victoria Police child-protection squad. Ridsdale, who is serving a 20-year sentence, is in court again in 2014 because some more of his victims have recently come forward. He is pleading guilty to these 30 new charges involving offences against 11 boys and three girls between 1961 and 1980. He will be sentenced later in 2014.

This photo helped to expose the cover-up

Broken Rites believes that this photo (below) raises two questions:

1. WHY did Bishop George Pell accompany Father Gerald Ridsdale to court on 27 May 1993 when Ridsdale received his first conviction for child-sex crimes?

2. WHY did no bishop, or even a priest, accompany the victims?

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Vic Govt urged to act faster on child abuse inquiry recommendations

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Ballarat abuse survivors say the State Government has not moved quickly enough to implement recommendations from a Victorian parliamentary inquiry into responses to child sex abuse.

Last November, the inquiry suggested a range of reforms on child safety, including changes to the criminal law and improvements to child protection standards.

Ballarat abuse survivor Andrew Collins says some victims are becoming impatient waiting for the recommendations to be implemented, saying they want a clearer time line from the Government.

“We need action, people are suffering, people are hurting, we want to make sure action is taken,” he said.

Premier Denis Napthine says the Government is acting on the report.

“We’ve already implemented a number of the other recommendations of the report but a full response will be made in a timely manner,” he said.

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Special school abuse royal commission: extraditing paedophile was deemed too expensive, inquiry hears

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY COURT REPORTER CANDICE MARCUS
March 19, 2014

Budgetary pressures prevented police from extraditing a paedophile school bus driver from Queensland to face court in Adelaide, an inquiry has heard.

Bus driver Brian Perkins sexually abused up to 30 intellectually disabled students in the late 1980s and early 1990s while working at St Ann’s special school.

He was finally extradited to South Australia from Queensland in 2002, more than a decade after his offending was discovered. He died in prison in 2009.

The royal commission into the case heard the police investigation was shut down, and when police later found out Perkins was living in Queensland, it was deemed too expensive to extradite him.

It also heard that the only reason Perkins was eventually extradited in 2002 was because the Archbishop of the Catholic Church in Adelaide met with the police commissioner about the matter.

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US priest to stand trial for sex attacks on four children

AUSTRALIA
The Age

March 19, 2014

Adam Cooper
Reporter for The Age

An American Catholic brother has been committed to stand trial on charges of sexually assaulting two boys and two girls more than 30 years ago.

Bernard Joseph Hartman, 74, who voluntarily returned to Australia from the United States last year after Victorian authorities initiated moves to have him extradited, will stand trial on 14 charges of indecent assault, two counts of gross indecency with a girl under 16 and two of assault.

After hearing more than two days of evidence in a committal hearing, magistrate Jo Metcalf on Wednesday found there was sufficient evidence for Brother Hartman to be found guilty.

Brother Hartman pleaded not guilty to the charges.

He is accused of sexually abusing two teenage boys in 1981 and 1982 while he was a teacher at St Paul’s College in Altona.

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Expert: Alleged rape by deacon dealt ‘thermonuclear’ shock waves

WASHINGTON
Yakima Herald-Republic

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

YAKIMA, Wash. — A man suing the Diocese of Yakima for alleged rape by a deacon had made significant progress overcoming abuse as a child but was dealt a serious setback by a subsequent incident involving the deacon when he was a teen, an expert witness testified Tuesday in federal court.

Randall L. Green, who was retained by the plaintiff’s attorneys, said the man had received “fortuitous” counseling at age 12.

But Green told U.S. District Judge Edward Shea that the plaintiff, identified in court records as John Doe, lost all that progress after the July 1999 incident in Zillah.

“The shock waves (from the incident) were thermonuclear, psychologically and physiologically, for Mr. Doe,” Green testified on the first day of the second week of the trial.

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Father Joe LeClair to be sentenced Wednesday morning

CANADA
CBC News

A popular Ottawa priest who stole $130,000 from his church is expected to find out Wednesday morning whether or not he will be sent to jail for his crimes.

Father Joe LeClair, a diagnosed pathological gambler, pleaded guilty to defrauding Blessed Sacrament of the money over the course of five years.

LeClair was the kind of leader that drew people in but his criminal confession has pulled parishioners apart, said Thea Boyd. She used to travel from Blossom Park in south Ottawa to the Glebe for church — specifically for LeClair.

“He just drew you in and right away your faith was restored. He just had that charisma about him,” she said. “We still feel that. We could still repeat some of his homilies that he did. He would make you cry and then he would make you laugh.”

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Fort Augustus school abuse: Victim at Sydney inquiry

SCOTLAND/AUSTRALIA
BBC News

A man molested by Benedictine monk Father Aiden Duggan has been recounting his story to a judicial inquiry into child abuse in Australia.

John Ellis has said he was abused as a boy by the monk who had left Scotland to return to his home in Sydney.

Father Duggan has been accused of sexually assaulting boys at Fort Augustus Abbey School in the Highlands.

His activities in Scotland were exposed by a BBC investigation.

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Bergen County Prosecutor: Autism Training Is Important For Officials

NEWJERSEY
NJTV News

[with video]

Recently, the Vatican expelled Michael Fugee from priesthood. He had been accused of inappropriate sexual contact with a minor. The decision from the Vatican came months after the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office dropped criminal charges against Fugee.

Molinelli said that the decision was a key part of the agreement that the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office had reached with Fugee and that the decision to remove Fugee as a priest came directly from Rome.

As for his relationship with the Archdiocese, Molinelli says that he did what he felt was necessary for the office to take over monitoring Fugee.

“There are a lot of conditions that Fugee has to comply with for the rest of his life,” Molinelli said. “We will make sure that he does continue to comply with them. We’re simply dealing with him now as a human being, as a one-on-one person and we no longer need to go through the Archdiocese to ensure compliance. Now we will do it directly with Fugee.”

Molinelli said that Fugee will not be required to register as a Megan’s Law offender, but he will continue to be monitored.

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St. Bonaventure dismisses bankruptcy complaint against Gallup Diocese

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., March 8, 2014

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE — Less than three weeks after filing a complaint in the Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy case, St. Bonaventure Indian School and Mission has voluntarily dismissed its adversary proceeding against the diocese.

The dismissal is without prejudice, meaning it could be filed again.

On Jan. 30, St. Bonaventure’s attorney Charles R. Hughson filed a Complaint to Quiet Title against the Gallup Diocese in a dispute over real estate property. In financial documents filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for its Chapter 11 petition, the diocese had claimed it owned a number of parcels of land in Thoreau, where St. Bonaventure is located. In the complaint, Hughson argued that the property had been given to St. Bonaventure by the diocese, and that a former chief executive of the diocesan mission school had transferred property back to the diocese without authorization.

When contacted, Hughson declined to comment on the litigation.

Two weeks later, Hughson filed an amended complaint that added a legalese claim, “The Diocese Deed contains language that may limit the title conveyed to a fee simple subject to a condition subsequent.”

The warranty deed in question, signed by the late Bishop Donald E. Pelotte in September 1992, states that in the event the “property is no longer used as a Catholic Mission and School, said property shall revert to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup.” According to court documents, St. Bonaventure sold at least one of the parcels of land two years later to private individuals in Thoreau.

Before bankruptcy attorneys for the Diocese of Gallup could respond to St. Bonaventure’s adversary proceeding, Hughson submitted the notice of dismissal on Feb. 17. Hughson cited federal rules regarding such action but did not provide any reasons for the decision to dismiss.

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Catholic sister leads Lenten prayer effort for clergy sex abuse victims

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, March 10, 2014

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP – While the Diocese of Gallup has garnered headlines because of its bankruptcy proceedings, Sister Rene Backe has given a lot of thought to a group of people who live in the shadow of those headlines.

After praying about what she could do to support victims of clergy sex abuse, Backe, the director of Gallup’s Sacred Heart Retreat Center, decided to invite others to pray the Stations of the Cross during Lent and pray for victims of abuse. Everyone is welcome to participate in the prayer services, held at 6 p.m. Wednesdays in the retreat center’s chapel.

“In my own mind it just didn’t seem enough to offer people money for the pain they endured,” she said in an interview at the chapel Friday. “It’s a sin against the whole body of Christ. Sin hurts us all.”

Backe, a member of the Congregation of St. Agnes, said she wanted to get a group of people to pray in atonement for the sin of abuse and to pray for the victims’ healing. Since Lent was approaching and praying the Stations of the Cross is a favorite Lenten devotion for many Christians, Backe thought it would be an appropriate way to pray for abuse victims.

Backe said she talked with Bishop James S. Wall and that he was supportive of the idea. He wrote a special prayer for abuse victims, she said, and he celebrated Mass during the first Stations of the Cross service on Ash Wednesday. Except for this week, Backe said, the bishop plans to attend each Wednesday gathering and give a short talk.

“I think too he feels this needs to be done in addition to the money part,” she said.

About 30 people attended the Ash Wednesday service, Backe said. “I’m hoping they will continue to come Wednesdays and pray for the victims,” she said.

“Many people make the Way of the Cross by themselves privately as a Lenten devotion,” Backe said, explaining it is a “walking prayer” that commemorates Jesus’ suffering and death.

As she prays for victims of abuse, Backe said, some of the Stations of the Cross have special significance for her. The fourth station, where Jesus encounters his mother, reminds her to pray for the mothers of abuse victims. The fifth station, where Simon of Cyrene is forced to help carry Jesus’ cross, reminds her of the need to help carry the burdens of abuse victims.

On Friday morning, Backe said, she was particularly reminded of abuse victims in the church’s daily scripture reading.

“Is it not sharing your food with the hungry, and sheltering the homeless poor; if you see someone lacking clothes, to clothe him, and not to turn away from your own kin?” Backe read in Isaiah 58:7.

It was a “powerful prayer moment,” she said, a reminder that abuse victims are her kin in the family of God and in the mystical body of Christ.

Although Backe said she has never met a survivor of clergy sex abuse, she has offered spiritual direction to a number of women who were sexually abused as children by uncles, grandfathers or brothers.

Abuse strips away a person’s dignity, Backe said, and it is her prayer that each victim of abuse can be “clothed with healing and grace and a sense of dignity” and know “they are God’s beloved child.”
“I guess I would just like them to know that their fellow Catholics and Christians are praying for them,” she said.

The Sacred Heart Retreat Center is located about 2 miles south of Gallup. Everyone is welcome to participate in the prayers each Wednesday at 6 p.m.

Information: Sister Rene Backe at (505) 722-6755

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Former Gallup priest named in abuse allegations

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, March 17, 2014

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

GALLUP — The number of Catholic clergy who have served in the Diocese of Gallup and have been credibly accused of the sexual abuse of minors increased once again.

With the advent of Lent, the Crosier Province in Phoenix released a comprehensive list of 19 current, former and deceased members of the Crosier Fathers and Brothers who have credible allegations against them.

The Rev. Justin Weger, O.S.C., who worked part-time for the Gallup Diocese in the mid-1970s, was included on the list.

Weger had been one of eight Crosiers to be publicly identified as sexually abusive clergy by the province in 2002. However, information about Weger’s ministry assignments, including his work in the Gallup Diocese and Native American communities, had not been released previously.

According to the Crosiers, Weger was born in 1925, ordained in 1952 and moved to the Southwest in 1974. He worked for the Diocese of Gallup in 1974-1975, providing weekend assistance in the diocese’s parishes in Arizona and New Mexico. Weger then moved to the Diocese of Tucson, where he served as parochial vicar at St. Mary Church in Sells, Ariz., located on the Tohono O’odham Indian Reservation.

He was removed from ministry in 1976, and his priestly faculties were withdrawn. Weger then became director of Tribal Lodge, Inc., believed to be a mental health treatment facility in Phoenix, from 1977 to 2002. He died in 2005.

In January, the Crosier Province and Gallup Bishop James S. Wall removed a current Gallup priest, the Rev. Timothy Conlon, O.S.C, from ministry because of an old abuse allegation. With these recent public announcements, Conlon and 10 other Crosiers have been newly identified as having credible allegations against them. The other 10 include former members Gerald Funcheon, Ron Melancon, Wendell Mohs, Michael Paquet and Roger Vaughn, and deceased members Cornelius DeVenster, Eugene Hambrock, Joseph Lendacky, Anton Schik and Urban Schmitt.

Province officials said they are currently investigating allegations against two more deceased Crosiers.

“It is our hope that this will bring healing, peace and comfort to the victims and their families,” Crosier Prior Provincial Thomas Enneking said.

According to the news release, the Crosier Province reports all abuse allegations to the appropriate authorities. However, supporters of abuse victims advocate that all reports of suspected abuse, current or past, be reported directly to law enforcement.

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Gay couple claims Worcester diocese refused to sell them commercial property

WORCESTER (MA)
Catholic Sentinel

Catholic News Service

WORCESTER, Mass. — Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley March 13 filed a brief in support of a married gay couple who have sued the Diocese of Worcester and its realtor for allegedly refusing to sell a commercial property to them.

Coakley argues that religious organizations can be subject to the requirements of Massachusetts’ anti-discrimination laws.

James Gavin Reardon Jr., attorney for the diocese, said that the diocese does not view this as a case of discrimination because the plaintiffs, James Fairbanks and Alain Beret, could not get financing for their original offer to buy the property.

“This is a contractual case where the buyer could not come up with the money,” he said.

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Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse arrives in country Victoria

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Kate Stowell

The first regional Victorian hearings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse are being held in Ballarat this week.

Reports of abuse in Ballarat’s schools, churches and orphanages date back to the 1950s.

Last year’s Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry which produced the Betrayal of Trust report described criminal child abuse in the Ballarat Diocese in the 1970s as “systemic” and “undeniable”.

It is believed at least 40 suicides in the Ballarat area are linked to child abuse-related illnesses, including post traumatic stress disorder and depression.

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Utah AG investigates statements made by Winston Blackmore

CANADA/UNITED STATES
Vancouver Sun

Canadian fundamentalist Mormon leader Winston Blackmore admitted under oath late last month in Utah that at least 10 of his 26 wives were under the age of 18 when he ‘married’ them in religious ceremonies.

Three of those child ‘brides’ were 15, another was 16.

Blackmore had voluntarily gone to Salt Lake City to give a deposition in a civil case that involves property held by the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in a fund called the United Effort Plan Trust. Blackmore didn’t have a lawyer at his side when he testified.

On Monday, a spokeswoman for the Utah Attorney General’s Office told reporter Ben Winslow from Fox News that it would look into what Blackmore said under oath.

“We are currently investigating the allegations,” Utah attorney general’s spokeswoman Missy Larsen said. “Attorney General [Sean] Reyes does not view illegal activities that target children and other vulnerable populations lightly and will prosecute criminal activity when appropriate.”

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Minister: change is needed in Catholic Church

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

[commission members]

David Leask
Chief Reporter

Wednesday 19 March 2014

SCOTLAND’S Catholic Church must change its culture and theology to protect children in its care, according to the Kirk minister asked to review its safeguards.

Dr Andrew McLellan yesterday announced the remit and membership of a new commission to investigate how the church, hit by a succession of scandals at home and abroad, handles abuse.

The former Moderator of the Church of Scotland made it clear he believes his own faith can offer some spiritual and practical solutions on the issue.

Mr McLellan, who is also a former inspector of prisons, admitted he had been surprised to be asked to lead the commission and insisted he had not accepted the job as an “ecumenical adventure”.

Speaking at a launch event in Edinburgh, he said: “I am not here representing the Church of Scotland but my own church has learned a lot about helping parishes to ‘own’ and to love safeguarding.

“That is part of the culture change, which the Catholic Church needs to learn as well.”

The Kirk stalwart also suggested there were new teachings in the Presbyterian faith that could be applied to the Catholic Church which, under Pope Francis, is grappling like never before with historical issues of physical and sexual abuse.

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Former Valencia man to face grand jury for alleged sex abuse crimes

CALIFORNIA
Signal SCV

The sex abuse case against a 26-year-old former Valencia man who worked part-time at a Santa Clarita Valley church goes before a grand jury in Missouri Wednesday, The Signal has learned.

Brandon Milburn is charged with six felony counts of first-degree statutory sodomy for allegedly molesting multiple victims between 2007 and 2009 in Missouri. He was in custody Wednesday in St. Louis.

On Wednesday, a grand jury in St. Louis will “be assigned” to review his case, said Det. Edward Magee, of the St. Louis County Police Department.

Milburn had initially been scheduled to appear in court for a preliminary hearing. However, depending on what the grand jury decides, that scheduled hearing may change, Magee explained.

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Church probe to speak to victims

SCOTLAND
MSN News

An independent review into the Catholic Church’s safeguarding and handling of abuse is to speak to victims in an attempt to create a policy of “no abuse and no cover up”.

The Very Rev Andrew McLellan, a former moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and one-time chief inspector of prisons, is leading a commission of 11 other members, including senior police and social work officers, to review current policies and practices within the Catholic Church in Scotland.

The commission will speak to victims of abuse to find out their experiences but will not investigate or rule on specific cases. Any allegations of criminal activity will be passed to police, the commission said.

It was set up by the Catholic Church last year in the wake of the scandal surrounding Cardinal Keith O’Brien.

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Villa Madonna up for sale

CANADA
Cape Breton Post

LITTLE BRAS D’OR — Although the signs are not yet posted, Villa Madonna Renewal House, owned by the Diocese of Antigonish, is for sale.

© Cape Breton Post photo Villa Madonna Renewal Centre in Little Bras d’Or.

The diocese had to take out a loan to fulfill its obligations under a class-action settlement with survivors of sexual abuse by priests.

All of the payments have been made in the class-action lawsuit. But in order to cover the payment of the loan, sales of property go toward covering the diocesan debt.

The diocese had to raise $15 million for the settlement of a class-action lawsuit with the alleged victims of sexual abuse from the 1950s to 2009. Another $3 million was raised to cover potential lawsuit costs of individual actions against the church.

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Factfile The Commission members

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Wednesday 19 March 2014

l Andrew McLellan:
Commission chairman. A former moderator of the Church of Scotland who served as HM Chief Inspector if Prisons for Scotland for seven years.

l Ranald Mair: Deputy chairman. Chief executive of Scottish Care, the lobby for the care home sector.

l Bishop John Arnold: The Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Westminster is a veteran of England’s Cumberlege Commission on preventing child sex abuse in the church.

l Malcolm Graham: Assistant Chief Constable of Police Scotland and one of the country’s most senior detectives.

l Nancy Loucks: Chief executive of charity Families Outside and a member of the Scottish Government’s Early Years Task Force.

l Donald Mackay: Lord Mackay of Drumadoon is a retired judge and former Lord Advocate who was involved in the Orkney abuse inquiry in 1991.

l Kathleen Marshall: Scotland’s former Commissioner for Children and Young People in Scotland has previously led inquiries in to child abuse at council homes in Edinburgh and is currently leading the child sexual exploitation inquiry in Northern Ireland.

l Sheena McDonald: One of Scotland’s best known journalists and broadcasters and a trustee of the Disasters Emergency Committee.

l Roisin McGoldrick: Teaching Fellow at Glasgow School of Social Work and chairwoman of the board of managers at the Catholic Church-run Good Shepherd residential unit in Renfrewshire.

l Bishop Stephen Robson: The Bishop of Dunkeld is one of Scotland’s most senior Roman Catholic clerics, an experienced educator and was auxiliary bishop to Cardinal Keith O’Brien.

l Lindsay Roy: A headteacher for nearly 20 years before being elected as a Labour MP in the 2008 Glenrothes by-election.

l Danny Sullivan: The Chairman of the National Catholic Safeguarding Commission is a retired civil servant.

l Dr David McAllister: The only paid official on the Commission, Dr McAllister is a former assistant chief inspector of prisons for Scotland. He will act as secretary.

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Australian Serial Paedophile Priest Described Abuse as ‘God’s Work,’ …

AUSTRALIA
International Business Times

Australian Serial Paedophile Priest Described Abuse as ‘God’s Work,’ Told Victims They Were ‘God’s Little Angel,’ Victims Had Lost Faith in the Catholic Church

By Esther Tanquintic-Misa | March 19, 2014

Gerald Francis Ridsdale, a former Australian Catholic priest, described his paedophile tendencies as “God’s work.” In raping a four-year-old girl, he told her she was “God’s little angel.”

Mr Ridsdale has admitted his guilt in sexually abusing 45 children that spanned 20 years from 1961 up to 1980.

One of his victims, who was under the care of the Catholic diocese, said she indecently assaulted during holiday drives when she was between 10 and 13 years old.

“I trusted you, Gerald Ridsdale, you represented God and all that is good,” she said as she read her victim statement on Tuesday to the Victorian County Court. “You exploited, manipulated and humiliated me while you hid behind the veil of the church.”

Several of his victims said they had lost faith in the Catholic Church because despite knowing about the paedophile priest ungodly acts, the institution still refused and failed to act on complaints.

“I’m unable to have any faith in them as an organisation,” one said in his victim statement.

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Civil registry of sex abusers never used

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

By Jim Siegel
The Columbus Dispatch • Wednesday March 19, 2014

Eight years ago, Bob Spada stood on the Senate floor to discuss his church sex-abuse bill and told his colleagues: “To be honest with you, I’m just a little bit sick.”

After hearing from numerous victims of sex abuse by priests and seeing about 150 cases involving accusations against leaders in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland, the North Royalton Republican struggled to tell his colleagues they should support the bill.

A year earlier, the Senate had unanimously approved a version of Spada’s bill containing a key provision: a one-year window for victims to file a lawsuit alleging child sex abuse that had occurred as long as 35 years earlier.

But the House, under then-Speaker Jon Husted and facing heavy pressure from Catholic leaders, stripped out the one-year window to file a lawsuit and replaced it with a civil registry.

Different from Ohio’s Sex Offender Notification Registry, which requires a criminal conviction, this listing gives victims the ability to place child-sex offenders on an online registry if a judge finds the offender liable in a civil judgment.

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Wyckoff Priest Accused of Sex Abuse Defrocked

NEW JERSEY
Patch

Posted by Jessica Mazzola (Editor) , March 18, 2014

Former Wyckoff Priest Michael Fugee, who admitted to sexually abusing a township teenage boy in 2001, has been defrocked, NorthJersey.com reported. According to the report, an archdiocese spokesperson said Monday that the Vatican has returned Fugee to a lay state. He had been a priest for 20 years, it said.

After admitting to the sexual abuse over a decade ago, Fugee was back in court last year after authorities found out he had been attending youth retreats and hearing children’s confessions, reports said. He was charged with violating a court-ordered ban on ministering to minors last May, reports said.

Bergen County Prosecutor John Molinelli and other law enforcement officials criticized the Archdiocese of Newark at the time, saying it did not properly monitor Fugee when the agreement was in place.

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Cardinal O’Brien friend on church sex abuse panel

SCOTLAND
Edinburgh Evening News

THE churchman leading an independent inquiry into the Catholic Church’s handling of sex abuse cases has defended the inclusion of a friend of disgraced cardinal Keith O’Brien on the commission.

Former Church of Scotland Moderator Andrew McLellan denied the appointment of Bishop Stephen Robson – who was Cardinal O’Brien’s number two in the Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh – created any conflict of interest.

Bishop Robson was named yesterday as one of 11 people to join Dr McLellan in reviewing the “safeguarding” policy of the Catholic Church in Scotland to help protect youngsters and vulnerable adults.

The commission, which also includes senior police officers and social workers, will speak to victims in an attempt to create a policy of “no abuse and no cover up” but will not investigate or rule on specific cases.

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‘Singing priest’ Tony Walsh challenges sentences for rape & sex abuse

IRELAND
Newstalk

Francesca Comyn
10:29 Wednesday 19 March 2014

He is challenging the severity of a 16-year sentence

The so-called ‘singing priest’ Tony Walsh is due in court to appeal against sentences imposed on him for the rape and sexual abuse of young boys in the 1970s and 1980s.

Mr. Walsh was an Elvis impersonator in the well known ‘All Priests Show’ that used to travel around Ireland.

The serial sexual abuser was later defrocked.

In 2010 he was handed down a 16-year sentence for the rape and indecent assault of young boys in the 70s and 80s.

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March 18, 2014

St. Paul archdiocese must yield info on ‘credibly accused’ priests, judge says

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 03/18/2014

A Ramsey County judge ruled Tuesday that the Twin Cities archdiocese must turn over by March 31 documents related to its priests “credibly accused” of child sexual abuse.

Names and biographical information on those 34 priests were disclosed in December, but attorneys for a plaintiff known as Doe 1 sought church documents that the archdiocese so far has refused to release.

Judge John Van de North wrote in a memorandum that Minnesota has a “long tradition of liberal discovery and a generous definition of relevance for purposes of gathering facts prior to trial.”

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis had argued that the discovery sought by the plaintiff concerned “internal policies of the Roman Catholic Church” that are protected by the U.S. and state constitutions.

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How Patrick Wall became the Catholic church’s worst nightmare

MINNESOTA
City Pages

By Jesse Marx Wednesday, Mar 19 2014

Patrick Wall flips through a six-inch-thick binder in a law office that once housed a confessional booth. He’s got whole boxes yet to comb through, each containing several decades’ worth of internal church memos, affidavits, and police reports.

Every whiff of possible corruption gets filed somewhere inside his graying, bushy dome, which seems mounted on his barrel chest sans neck. He has a face like a bulldog and the cadence of a detective; in another life he might have made it to the NFL.

But today he has a more sundry task: researching clerical sexual abuse cases and relaying the findings to the St. Paul attorneys who employ him.

Wall won’t be present when Archbishop John Nienstedt and former Vicar General Kevin McDonough are deposed in a few weeks, but his stamp will be all over the inquisition. It’s for the best, because Wall’s presence may rub the holy men the wrong way. He’s no longer welcome at the archdiocese, and for good reason.

“I am the enemy,” Wall says, smiling. “I am the ultimate defector.”

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Judge denies motion by archdiocese to seal abuse documents

MINNESOTA
KARE

ST. PAUL, Minn. – The St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese will have to make credible child sex abuse cases public, according to a judge’s ruling in Ramsey County District Court on Tuesday.

“The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis looks forward to working with the Court, the opposing parties and the special master in complying with (Monday’s) ruling,” the archdiocese said in a statement.

District Court Judge John Van de North denied a request from the archdiocese to seal all files on priests who sexually abused children. The ruling paves the way for the release of thousands of pages of documents dating back to 1970 to 1985.

The decision is connected to the filing of a lawsuit by an alleged victim former priest Tom Adamson.

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Archdiocese must make abuse documents public, judge rules

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Updated: March 18, 2014

Archdiocese had asked to seal the abuse documents, but judge denies motion.

By Jean Hopfensperger  hopfen@startribune.com

A judge reaffirmed Tuesday that the St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese must make its files related to child sex abuse cases public.

The archdiocese had requested that its files on priests who sexually abused children should be sealed.

But Ramsey County District Court Judge John Van de North denied the motion Tuesday, paving the way for the release of thousands of pages of documents on priests who were credibly charged with abusing children from 1970 to 1985.

The move comes in response to a lawsuit filed by an alleged victim of former priest Tom Adamson.

“The files will reveal who knew what, when, and what they did about it,” said Jeff Anderson, the victim’s attorney.

In a statement released Tuesday afternoon, the archdiocese said it looks forward to working with the court and the opposing parties to comply with the ruling, adding that the decision is consistent with the rulings made from the bench at a Feb. 11 court hearing.

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Hidden Heist in the Holy See? SECRET BIGGEST HEIST in the history of mankind! Pope Francis is the Greatest THIEF on earth?!

UNITED STATES
Pope Francis the CON Christ.

Updated March 19, 2014

Paris Arrow

According to the book – The Vatican Billions by Avro Manhattan – subtitle “Two Thousand Years of Wealth Accumulation from Caesar to the Space Age” : “The Vatican has large investments with the Rothschilds of Britain, France and America, with the Hambros Bank, with the Credit Suisse in London and Zurich. In the United States it has large investments with the Morgan Bank, the Chase-Manhattan Bank, the First National Bank of New York, the Bankers Trust Company, and others. The Vatican has billions of shares in the most powerful international corporations such as Gulf Oil, Shell, General Motors, Bethlehem Steel, General Electric, International Business Machines, T.W.A., etc. At a conservative estimate, these amount to more than 500 million dollars in the U.S.A. alone” (NB. this book was written in 1983).

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Victims of abuse at the hands of the Catholic Church set to speak out as part of an independent review

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

A COMMISSION will speak to victims of abuse to find out their experiences but will not investigate or rule on specific cases. Any allegations of criminal activity will be passed to police, the commission said.

AN independent review into the Catholic Church’s safeguarding and handling of abuse is to speak to victims in an attempt to create a policy of “no abuse and no cover up”.

The Very Rev Andrew McLellan, a former moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and one-time chief inspector of prisons, is leading a commission of 11 other members, including senior police and social work officers, to review current policies and practices within the Catholic Church in Scotland.

The commission will speak to victims of abuse to find out their experiences but will not investigate or rule on specific cases. Any allegations of criminal activity will be passed to police, the commission said.

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Newark Archdiocese Says Pedophile Priests Can Be Buried in Vestments [POLL]

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey 101.5

By Ray Rossi March 18, 2014

Yesterday it was announced that Fr. Michael Fugee, who, at one time, had been elevated by Newark Archbishop John Myers to the position of co-director of the Office of Continuing Education and Ongoing Formation of Priests – despite having been tried in a child molestation case – had finally been removed as a priest.

It took long enough for that to happen – this after he flouted an agreement he’d made with prosecutors not to have any contact with children.

Now comes word that the Newark Archdiocese will now allow priests who’d been removed from churches following credible sexual abuse charges may be buried in their priestly vestments.

It may seem a small thing.

After all, they’re dead and their corpses are rotting in a box. What should it matter what they’re wearing?

However, it’s all in the symbolism.

They’re still being buried as priests, and that has some of us questioning the wisdom of the Archbishop who made that decision.

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South Australia’s top detective…

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

South Australia’s top detective shut down investigation into paedophile bus driver Brian Perkins after his arrest in 1993, inquiry told

NIGEL HUNT THE ADVERTISER MARCH 18, 2014

THE state’s most senior detective shut down an investigation into paedophile bus driver Brian Perkins after his arrest in 1993 that prevented further victims being identified, an inquiry has heard.

The order, given by Assistant Commissioner Colin Watkins, angered the detectives involved in the operation who believed Perkins may have sexually abused more students at St Ann’s Special School than the one he had been charged in connection with.

Detective Sergeant Len Mosheev told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that he had been in a meeting with the officers involved in Operation Deny when Mr Watkins telephoned the forward commander Detective Chief Inspector Peter Simons and gave the order.

A visibly agitated Det Mosheev said Det Chief Insp Simons was “told to inform us to cease.’’ He said the detectives were not allowed to examine any material seized from Perkins when they arrested him, which included a large number of photographs of naked men and boys, or continue further inquiries to identify any other potential victims.

Presiding member Jennifer Coate asked Det Mosheev if he was given any reasons and he replied “no, they would not give us reasons — none at all — and we were really angry and that’s documented in the ACB report’’.

“We didn’t know what was going on behind the scenes, but we didn’t think it was appropriate,’’ he replied. He said there was “so much more to look at’’ but he could not continue because disobeying a commissioned officer would mean “disciplinary action, possible sacking’’.

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Cardinal Pell was ‘giving instructions’ as Catholic church fought abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

David Marr
theguardian.com, Tuesday 18 March 2014

Claims by Cardinal George Pell that he had little to do with the conduct of the notorious Ellis case have been flatly contradicted by the church’s own lawyer in dramatic testimony on Tuesday to the royal commission into the institutional response to child abuse.

“I didn’t have any doubt the cardinal was being kept up to date on developments in the case,” Paul McCann of church lawyers Corrs, Chambers, Westgarth told the commission. “He was giving instructions on various steps.”

John Ellis sued Pell and the trustees of the Catholic church in 2005 after being refused compensation for his abuse at the hands of Father Aidan Duggan. After a hard-fought contest, Ellis lost. The decision made legal history, confirming the Catholic church in Australia is unsueable. For years the church demanded Ellis pay its legal costs of $750,000.

When a frail Ellis met Pell for the first time in 2009, he came away immensely relieved to think the cardinal had not been “in the loop” when decisions were made on fighting his case. After the meeting, the cardinal’s secretary, Dr Michael Casey, wrote to Ellis apologising for the rough time he had had during the litigation.

“Cardinal Pell wants you to know that although he believed that your claim was for many millions of dollars, he now knows that the truth of the matter was … an “offer of compromise” submitted to the Archdiocese in December 2004 of only $750,000.

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Detective tells inquiry mistakes made in St Ann’s investigation

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A South Australia police officer has admitted to the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse that if he had checked for previous convictions or outstanding warrants for paedophile Brian Perkins he would have been arrested early in the investigation of the abuse of as many as 30 boys at the St Ann’s Special School in the early 1990s. Detective Sargeant Leonid Mosheev also told the Commission it was absurd to suggest police had told the school not to tell parents of the abuse allegations.

Transcript

MARK COLVIN: A South Australian police detective has admitted to the Royal Commission into child sexual abuse that mistakes in an investigation helped a paedophile bus driver named Brian Perkins avoid justice for several years.

The commission is investigating how Perkins was able to flee South Australia in 1993 after abusing as many as 30 intellectually disabled boys at the Adelaide Catholic Special School, St Ann’s.

Most of the families didn’t find out for more than a decade that their sons were most likely among Perkins’ victims.

But officer Leonid Mosheev is adamant that police never told the Catholic school not to tell other parents of the abuse allegations.

Samantha Donovan reports.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: South Australian Police were first alerted to the possibility Brian Perkins may have been abusing at least one student at St Ann’s Special School in August 1991.

The Royal Commission heard today that the mother of a 19-year-old female former student of the school had reported that Perkins had been paying the girl to take topless photos of her and had asked her to appear naked in photos with the witness known as LH, then an intellectually disabled teenager at the school.

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Detective ‘horrified’ to discover St Ann’s special school sex abuse investigation shut down, inquiry hears

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY COURT REPORTER CANDICE MARCUS
March 18, 2014

A detective was “furious” and “horrified” that an investigation into a paedophile ring was prematurely shut down, a royal commission in Adelaide has heard.

The inquiry, which is examining the sexual abuse of intellectually disabled students from St Ann’s Special School more than two decades ago, today heard Assistant Police Commissioner Colin Watkins ordered the investigation cease in 1993.

Detective Sergeant Leonid Mosheev was under intense questioning from Sophie David, who is counsel assisting the inquiry, throughout day two of the hearing into the case.

Detective Sergeant Mosheev said two years after school bus driver Brian Perkins was initially identified as having molested the intellectually disabled students, he was tasked with investigating Perkins, who was one of four paedophiles targeted under Operation Deny.

He said in 1993 he received an order, which he believed was from Assistant Commissioner Watkins, to shut down the operation and not investigate the St Ann’s case any further.

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Police boss tells of abuse inquiry fury

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

An assistant police commissioner ordered detectives to stop investigating four pedophiles, the royal commission into sexual abuse has heard.

Detective Sergeant Leonid Mosheev said that in September 1993 he had seized a large volume of material, including pornographic photos, from Adelaide school bus driver Brian Perkins.

But not long after he was directed not to look at the exhibits or continue inquiries, which meant he could only rely on material obtained in August 1991.

He said the direction came from then-assistant commissioner Colin Watkins after Operation Deny was set up in September 1993 to investigate four pedophiles, including Perkins.

‘It was categoric. We were not to investigate to find any more victims,’ Det Sgt Mosheev said on Tuesday at the commission’s Adelaide hearing into Perkins’ sexual abuse of boys at the Catholic St Ann’s Special School for children.

‘We were to finalise our current brief of evidence and we were just to finish that off.’

Officers became angry at the instruction but were ‘scared absolutely out of our wits’ of high-ranking officers and he could not disobey a senior officer, he said.

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Clergy Abuse Documentary ‘BASTA’ to Premier at Boston International Film Festival on Easter Sunday

MASSACHUSETTS
PR Web

Boston Massachusetts (PRWEB) March 18, 2014

BASTA, a film documenting the emotional journey taken by simple men detailing their attempts to reach into the Vatican walls in search of help, hope and aid in healing a nation reeling from the effects of the clergy abuse crisis, will premiere at the Boston International Film Festival on Sunday, April 20th.
Attempting to battle the cover-up, shame and silence of clergy sexual abuse, three survivors from Boston Massachusetts, travel to Rome reaching behind the secret walls of The Vatican. Their weeklong effort becomes a decade long mission that exposes mind blowing statistics and unexpected worldwide results.

“There are times when a societal issue is so incomprehensible that it seems nearly impossible for people to grasp, much less digest,” shared filmmaker Gary Bergeron. “The worldwide epidemic of child sexual abuse by clergy is such an issue. As the producer and subject matter expert for this film, I wanted to show the audience the facts in a way that allows viewers to draw their own conclusions. The goal is to provide the audience an opportunity to travel on the decade-long journey through the eyes of someone who has moved from being a childhood victim to an adult survivor. Our hopes are that this film will engage society in a conversation that is long overdue. Being selected by the Boston International Film Festival is a step in that direction. The Boston International Film Festival’s decision to premiere the film on Easter Sunday, is perhaps divine intervention.”

According to Bergeron, “This is a global epidemic which needs, and deserves, global awareness. There are 60 million adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse living in the United States alone. Survivors need to know that they are not alone and above all, there is always hope.”

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Paedophile priest Ridsdale pleads guilty to 30 more charges

AUSTRALIA
The Standard

By JOEL CRESSWELL March 19, 2014

One of Australia’s worst paedophile priests told victims they were “God’s little angel” and that his abuse was “the Lord’s work”.

Former Catholic priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale has pleaded guilty to 30 charges, including 28 counts of indecent assault on children in Victoria’s Western District, between 1961 and 1980.

Ridsdale, 79, abused children as young as four, and assaulted 11 boys and three girls after befriending them and their families.

One of his victims said Ridsdale hid behind the Catholic Church as he abused.

“I trusted you Gerald Ridsdale, you represented God and all that is good,” she said, reading her victim impact statement to the Victorian County Court yesterday.

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Michael Fugee Laicized: What’s wrong with this picture?

NEW JERSEY
Catholic Culture

By Dr. Jeff Mirus March 18, 2014

Newark priest Michael Fugee has been laicized after violating an agreement with prosecutors to stay out of any ministry involving children. Contrary to the agreement, Fugee slipped into the neighboring Diocese of Trenton, without seeking permission, and participated in youth programs at two parishes. We provide a brief report on Fugee’s laicization, with links to more detailed background from the Newark Star Ledger.

Our story is accurate, but what is wrong with the picture it presents?

I suppose you could pick out several things. One is certainly Fugee’s assignment by Archbishop John Myers as co-director of the Office of Continuing Education and Ongoing Formation of Priests. Admittedly, there are only a limited number of positions for priests who are not allowed to work with youth, but the Ongoing Formation of Priests? Really?

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Eric Dejaeger’s character not at issue: Nunavut judge

CANADA
CBC News

A Nunavut court judge has dismissed an application by Crown counsel Doug Curliss that sought special permission to cross-examine Eric Dejaeger on the facts underlying his previous convictions.

The former Oblate priest, now 66-years-old, is now on trial in Iqaluit facing dozens of charges alleging sexual abuse against children in Igloolik three decades ago.

Curliss made an application to revisit Dejaeger’s convictions in court Monday. Dejaeger was convicted on charges of sexual assault in Baker Lake in 1989 and again in 1991.

In a written judgment issued this morning, Justice Robert Kilpatrick denied the application.

He pointed out that Canadian common law prevents Crown prosecutors from presenting evidence of bad character, “unless or until the defendant puts his or her character at issue.”

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Nunavut court: criminal record of former Nunavut priest many not be used in trial

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

DAVID MURPHY

Justice Robert Kilpatrick as ruled that Eric Dejaeger’s previous criminal record cannot be entered into evidence, or used against him, at his trial now underway in Iqaluit.

In a written decision released March 18, Kilpatrick said several of the Crown’s questions during Dejaeger’s cross-examination were a “trap” set in order to bring the Belgian priest’s character into question.

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

Kilpatrick released his decision the morning after both Crown and defence lawyers wrestled in the Nunavut Court of Justice over whether to admit his previous criminal record as evidence March 17.

Because such evidence can be highly prejudicial to an accused person, Crown lawyers can’t introduce it unless they persuade a judge that the value of such evidence in establishing facts outweighs its prejudicial effects.

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Angoulême : du sursis pour le père Braud, condamné pour agressions sexuelles

FRANCE
Sud Ouest

Le père Patrick Braud a été condamné ce mardi après-midi par le tribunal correctionnel d’Angoulême à deux ans de prison avec sursis pour agressions sexuelles sur deux adolescentes de la communauté catholique, entre 1994 et 1998.

Absent à l’énoncé du jugement, il est en revanche relaxé pour des attouchements sur une troisième jeune fille au retour d’une excursion paroissiale, en 2006.

Lors de l’audience, le 18 février dernier, l’ex-curé de la cathédrale Saint-Pierre d’Angoulême avait “formellement contesté ces accusations d’agressions sexuelles”, reconnaissant toutefois des gestes ambigus, baisers dans le cou et autres doigts mordillés, à l’endroit des victimes, deux jeunes sœurs.

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Angoulême : le père Patrick Braud condamné à 2 ans de prison avec sursis

FRANCE
Poitou-Charentes

Le tribunal d’Angoulême a rendu ce mardi après midi son délibéré dans l’affaire du père Patrick Braud.

L’ancien curé et vicaire de la cathédrale d’Angoulême a été condamné à une peine de deux années de prison avec sursis, assortie d’une obligation de soins, pour des agressions sexuelles commises sur deux adolescentes de la communauté catholique locale entre 1994 et 1998. Il s’est également vu interdire de contact avec les victimes, deux jeunes femmes âgées à présent de 22 et 32 ans.

Il a été en outre condamné à verser 3.000 euros au titre du préjudice moral à l’une, tandis que le montant des dommages et intérêts reste pendant pour l’autre, lié à une expertise complémentaire à la demande de la défense.

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Ex-Priest Convicted for Sex Abuse on French Girls

FRANCE
ABC News (US)

AP

A court in southwestern France has convicted a former Roman Catholic priest for sexual abuse against two sisters while they were minors between 1994 and 1998, one of the first cases of its kind in years in France.

Officials said the court in Angouleme on Tuesday sentenced 56-year-old Patrick Braud to a two-year suspended prison sentence, ordered him to undergo treatment, and pay fines and other fees to the sisters over last month’s trial.

The court rejected part of the case brought by another woman, and rejected a prosecutor’s request for Braud to be locked up. Defense lawyers said Braud was deciding whether to appeal. He remains a priest if not serving actively.

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«Ich würde niemandem mit diesem Problem raten, er solle heiraten»

SCHWEIZ
Berner Zeitung

Von Michael Meier

Der ehemalige St. Galler Bischof Ivo Fürer über den sexuellen Missbrauch durch Priester, die Freistellung des Zölibats und seine eigene Jugend.

Herr Bischof Fürer, sind Sie froh, jetzt, wo die Missbrauchsskandale für Schlagzeilen sorgen, nicht mehr im Amt zu sein?

Wir hatten schon früher einen Fall im Bistum St. Gallen: Alois F. von Walenstadt, der verurteilt worden ist. Damals war ich Bischof. Die ganze Karwoche 2002 war ich unter Beschuss der Medien. Ich habe dann die Arbeitsgruppe «Sexuelle Übergriffe in der Pastoral» eingesetzt, die ein Merkblatt herausgab. In allen Dekanaten wurden Tagungen zum Thema Distanz und Nähe in der Seelsorge durchgeführt.

Überrascht Sie heute die Häufung von Missbrauchsfällen?
Ja. Als Jugendlicher war ich in Appenzell im Kollegi und später in Innsbruck im Priesterseminar. Das Thema Missbrauch von Jugendlichen lag gänzlich jenseits dieser Welt.

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Rückhalt aus dem Vatikan

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Rundschau

[Summary: Controversial Limburg Bishop Franz-Peter van Elst Tebartz can still count on the backing of the Vatican. The local prefect of the CDF, Mainz Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Muller, called criticism of the bishop a “smear campaign.” The cardinal said it’s like a manhunt and someone is slaughtered and harks back to a dark era in Germany’s history.]

MAINZ/LIMBURG. –
Der umstrittene Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst kann immer noch auf Rückendeckung aus dem Vatikan zählen. Der dortige Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation, der aus Mainz stammende Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller, hat die Kritik an dem Bischof als “Rufmordkampagne” bezeichnet. “Da gibt es offenbar Lust auf Menschenjagd”, sagte Müller der Mainzer “Allgemeinen Zeitung”. Dass jemand “derart niedergemacht” werde, sei menschenunwürdig. “So etwas hatten wir in Deutschland früher schon mal in einer ganz dunklen Epoche”, sagte der Kardinal.

Müller mag weiterhin keine kirchenrechtlichen Gründe erkennen, Tebartz-van Elst als Bischof abzusetzen. Man müsse fragen, ob “gezielt Widerwillen gegen Tebartz gezüchtet wurde. Es ist ja heutzutage leicht, Stimmungen in der Öffentlichkeit aufzubauen”, sagte Müller. Die Entscheidung des Papstes im Fall Tebartz-van Elst, dem Prunksucht und intransparentes Finanzgebaren vorgeworfen wird, wird in Kürze erwartet.

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Zu sehr den Täter im Blick

DEUTSCHLAND
PNN

[Summary: Stefan Luttke of Potsdam was victim of sexual abuse by a chaplain and has been silent for years. As an adult, he experienced how the church handled what happened to him as a humiliation. Cardinal Woelke regrets and case and the Vatican has heard about it. Luttke said he could not believe his eyes when he read the message from the Berlin archdiocese in April 2013. The allegation was seen to be inconclusive and the priest’s return as pastor to his congregation would be possible. He regards the message from Berlin as being re-victimization.]

Der Potsdamer Stefan Lüttke wurde Opfer sexuellen Missbrauchs durch einen Kaplan und hat jahrelang geschwiegen. Als Erwachsener erlebte er den Umgang der Kirche mit seinem Schicksal als Demütigung. Kardinal Woelki bedauert den Fall. Auch der Vatikan ist eingeschaltet

Stefan Lüttke traute seinen Augen nicht, als er im April 2013 die Mitteilung des Berliner Erzbistums las. Da stand tatsächlich, dass die „staatlichen und kirchlichen Untersuchungen“ gegen seinen früheren Kaplan aus Potsdam und heutigen Pfarrer der Gemeinde Herz Jesu Stefan M. in Berlin-Tegel „ergebnislos eingestellt“ wurden. „Der Wiederaufnahme seines priesterlichen Dienstes steht nichts mehr entgegen. Damit wäre auch seine Rückkehr in die Aufgaben des Pfarrers dieser Gemeinde möglich.“

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NJ- Newark bishop defends his colleague; SNAP responds

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

In a depressing op-ed Newark Bishop Hebda defends the opulent and expensive retirement home Archbishop John Myers is building for himself.

[The Record]

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

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

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

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

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Review of Catholic Church in Scotland to hear from abuse victims

SCOTLAND
BBC News

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314-862-7688 home, 314-503-0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

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

[BBC News]

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

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

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

Priest associated with Winona Diocese pleads guilty in sex abuse case

MINNESOTA
News 8000

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

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

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

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

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

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Editorial: Stricter Child Abuse Reporting Laws Are Needed

CONNECTICUT
Connecticut Law Review

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

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

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

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

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

Kilpatrick ruled Dejaeger had been trapped into those statements.

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

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

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Blue Earth priest pleads guilty in sex abuse case

MINNESOTA
SF Gate

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

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

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

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

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NJ- Notorious predator priest defrocked; SNAP responds

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 2014

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

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

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

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

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

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The Catholic Church and sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

March 19, 2014

Bill O’Chee
The Hermit

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

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

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

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

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

Let’s take the Catholic Church as an example.

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

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

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CT- SNAP to Hartford archbishop: Drop your appeal

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 2014

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Poland- priest detained for child sexual abuse, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314-862-7688 home, 314-503-0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

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

[The News]

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

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

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

SCOTLAND
The Tablet

18 March 2014 by Abigail Frymann and Brian Morton

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

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

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

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

WASHINGTON
Yakima Herald- Republic

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

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

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

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

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

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NJ Priest Defrocked After Violating Court Order

NEW JERSEY
NBC New York

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

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

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

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

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Ridsdale called abuse ‘Lord’s work’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

March 18, 2014

Joel Cresswell

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

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

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

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

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Bravery must be welcomed and understood

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

18 MARCH 2014

HEATHER LASKEY

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

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

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

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

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

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

LOUISIANA
Shreveport Times

Written by
Vickie Welborn

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

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

Additional lawsuits are anticipated from two other families.

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

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

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Problem priest resurfaces in Paraguay

PENNSYLVANIA
Times Leader

March 17. 2014

By Mark Guydish – mguydish@civitasmedia.com

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

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

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

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

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Furlong abuse case comes before a judge

CANADA
The Tyee

By BOB MACKIN
Published March 17, 2014

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

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

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

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

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Church was advised against costs chase

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

BY PETER TRUTE
March 18, 2014

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

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

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

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

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Archdiocese Schedules Mass For Clergy Abuse Victims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Paul Kurtz

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

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

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

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

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Former Catholic Church official contradicts …

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

BY ANTONETTE COLLINS
March 18, 2014

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

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

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

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

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

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Muscoy pastor in court charged with sexual molestation, child abuse

CALIFORNIA
KABC

Rob McMillan

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

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

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

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

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

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Accused former Wyckoff priest Michael Fugee is defrocked

NEW JERSEY
The Record

MARCH 17, 2014

BY JEFF GREEN
STAFF WRITER
THE RECORD

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

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

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

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

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Woman in rape case tells her side

KANSAS
Dodge Globe

[with video]

By Nancy Calderon
Posted Mar. 17, 2014

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

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

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

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

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Thumbs up, thumbs down

CONNECTICUT
Greenwich Times

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

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Duluth: Judge limits two sex abuse lawsuits against Catholic diocese

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

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

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

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

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

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

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

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