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.

January 3, 2014

Monsignor William Lynn Released From Philadelphia County Prison

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) – Monsignor William Lynn has been released from prison.

According to officials, Lynn was fitted with an electronic monitor and released from Philadelphia County Prison on Friday afternoon.

He reportedly must remain within city boundaries and is staying with an undisclosed relative until his Monday hearing.

On Thursday, Lynn was released from state prison, where he’d been housed for 18 months after being charged with child endangerment for reassigning sexually abusive priests to other parishes instead reporting them to law enforcement (see previous story).

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 Who Won Appeal of Abuse Conviction Prepares for Prison Release

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC Bay Area

A Roman Catholic church official who won an appeal of his landmark conviction in the priest-abuse scandal left a Philadelphia jail after a one-night stay.

On Thursday, Monsignor William Lynn left another state prison after serving 18 months behind bars.

Lynn left the prison in Waymart in northeastern Pennsylvania around 10 a.m. Thursday, prison spokeswoman Terri Fazio said, and was taken by the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office to Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility in Philadelphia where he spent the night.

On Friday morning Lynn was released to an undisclosed location in the city after being fitted with an electronic monitoring device.

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.

Deadline For St. Louis Archdiocese To Release Clergy Abuse Records Approaches

ST. LOUIS (MO)
CBS St. Louis

ST. LOUIS (KMOX) – No indication yet what the St. Louis Archdiocese plans to do about Friday’s deadline to adhere to the court-ordered release of clergy abuse information.

The Archdiocese has until the end of the working day today to release the names of all priests accused of sexual abuse in the past 20 years and the names of those who made the complaints.

But St. Louis Circuit Judge Robert Dierker says the Archdiocese could withhold the names of those involved in cases the church determined were unsubstantiated.

A woman who is suing a defrocked priest, the Archdiocese and Archbishop Robert Carlson sought the records.

In a written statement, Archdiocesan officials say Judge Dierker’s 13 page order clearly shows these are very complicated issues and it will continue to work within the judicial process toward a resolution to this lawsuit which it says is rooted in the truth and fairness to all involved.

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. Paul Archdiocese asks court to limit the release of names of accused priests

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: January 3, 2014

Archdiocese must file a second list of accused priests next week.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis will be in court Friday morning to argue that the names of some priests accused of child sexual abuse should not be included in a second list it must file by Monday.

Attorneys for the archdiocese say that the Ramsey County District Court order requiring the release of a second list of names — this time of all priests accused of abuse after 2004, regardless of whether they were “credibly accused” — is ambiguous and could harm the reputation of innocent priests.

The diocese of Winona wrote a letter to the court, supporting the archdiocese.

“Rumors spread by a mentally unbalanced individual, by a disgruntled parish employee, by conservative parishioners disliking a liberal pastor [or vice versa]…. would have to be publicly disclosed without regard to credibility,” wrote the archdiocese’ attorney Tom Wieser, in a Dec. 18 letter to Ramsey County Judge John Van de North.

The attorney for the victim who filed the lawsuit against the archdiocese, resulting in the court order, asked the judge to deny the request in a Dec. 20 letter.

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

JUDGE ROBERT DIERKER & CHURCH OFFICIALS

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

January 3, 2014 10:53 am | Author: berger

When Judge Robert Dierker sanctioned the St. Louis Catholic archdiocese earlier this week for refusing to turn over names of accused pedophile priests, it was the first time ever in Missouri history that church officials were punished for their legal maneuvers in the nearly 200 clergy abuse lawsuits that have been filed. Dierker also took a verbal swipe or two at Archbishop Robert Carlson, especially when the prelate claimed that “the archdiocese has no right to require parishes” to give him information about child molesters on the church payroll. That posture is “strikingly at odds with” the archdiocese’s actions and arguments in the St. Stan’s conflict, Dierker noted.“Across the country, 30 bishops have voluntarily and publicly disclosed predator priests’ names, and a dozen judges have forced bishops to reveal their names,” noted SNAP’s David Clohessy. “But Carlson won’t even turn the names over privately when they’re covered by a protective order.”

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 Salvation Army Kroc Centers (Or: Crying Poor)

AUSTRALIA/UNITED STATES
lewisblayse.net

Watch out YMCA, the Salvation Army is moving in. Salvation Army “Kroc Centers” are being built all over the U.S. They are named in honour of the founder of McDonalds restaurants, Ray Kroc, and some of the money for them came from the Joan Kroc bequest (see previous posting).

The centers have swimming pools, gyms, basketball courts, artificial rock climbing, ovals etc. They have many children’s programs, ranging from birthday parties, to after-school supervision, and in some cases, school holiday programs.

Most of the centers cost between $100 million to $200 million to build. All up, the 50 or so centers cost somewhere over $5 billion. That would provide a lot of meals in soup kitchens.

The idea was to provide fitness and child care facilities for underprivileged neighbourhoods. However, not many of them would be able to afford the fees. For example, the Coeur d’Alene center offers personal fitness coaching for $30 per half hour. The Boston center’s fitness membership is $660 per years plus a $50 joining fee.

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.

Pope orders new rules on relations between bishops, religious orders

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

By Francis X. Rocca
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis said he has ordered a revision of what he called outdated Vatican norms on the relations between religious orders and local bishops, in order to promote greater appreciation of the orders’ distinctive missions.

The pope’s words were published Jan. 3 in the Italian Jesuit magazine La Civilta Cattolica. He made the comments Nov. 29 at a closed-door meeting with 120 superiors general of religious orders from around the world.

Pope Francis referred to “Mutuae Relationes,” a set of directives issued jointly by the Congregation for Bishops and the Congregation for Religious in 1978. The document said that religious orders are part of the local church, though with their own internal organization, and that their “right to autonomy” should never be considered as independence from the local church.

“That document was useful at the time but is now outdated,” the pope said. “The charisms of the various institutes need to be respected and fostered because they are needed in dioceses.”

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.

Leave your comfort zone and serve the poor, Pope tells priests

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

BY PHILIP PULLELLA
VATICAN CITY Fri Jan 3, 2014

(Reuters) – Pope Francis has told Roman Catholic priests to leave their comfort zone and get out among people on the margins of society or else risk becoming “abstract ideologists”.

The Italian Jesuit journal Civilta Cattolica published an exclusive text on Friday of a three-hour, closed-door meeting the Argentinian-born pontiff had in late November with heads of orders of priests from around the world.

Francis said priests had to have “real contact with the poor” and the marginalized.

“This is really very important to me: the need to become acquainted with reality by experience, to spend time walking on the periphery in order really to become acquainted with the reality and life-experiences of people,” he told them.

“If this does not happen we then run the risk of being abstract ideologists or fundamentalists, which is not healthy.”

Since his election in 2013 as the first non-European pope in 1,300 years, Francis has been prodding priests, nuns and bishops to think less about their careers in the Church and to listen more to the needs of ordinary Catholics, especially the poor.

Taking over an institution reeling from child sex abuse, financial and other scandals and losing members to other religions, Francis has tried to refocus on the basic Christian teachings of compassion, simplicity and humility.

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.

Pope warns of fallout from poorly trained priests

VATICAN CITY
Houston Chronicle

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis has warned that priests can become “little monsters” if they aren’t trained properly while studying as seminarians.

Francis also warned against accepting men for the priesthood who may have been implicated in sexual abuse, saying the protection of the Catholic faithful is most important.

Francis made the comments during a closed-door meeting of 120 superiors of religious orders Nov. 29 at the Vatican. On Friday, the Jesuit journal La Civilta Cattolica provided a report of the informal, question and answer session. The Vatican never provided a transcript of the meeting.

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.

Comenzaron los alegatos de clausura en juicio contra sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual en Concepción

CHILE
Bio Bio

La Fiscalía reiteró en sus alegatos de clausura las pruebas contra el sacerdote Audín Araya, acusado de abusar sexualmente de tres jóvenes el año 2008 cuando era rector del colegio Salesianos. En la audiencia también intervino el abogado querellante, restando sólo el cierre de la defensa antes del veredicto en este emblemático juicio.

Comenzó la cuenta regresiva en el juicio contra el religioso, al entregar el Ministerio Público sus alegatos de clausura, a cargo del fiscal Alejandro Alí.

Ante las juezas del Tribunal Oral de Concepción, el persecutor recordó todas las pruebas entregadas en las últimas tres semanas contra Audín Araya y que dieron cuenta -dijo- de las tocaciones que debieron soportar tres menores de edad asesorados por éste en su vocación sacerdotal.

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

Vatican Diary / The new cardinals Francis has in mind

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

VATICAN CITY, JANUARY 3, 2014 – The official news is that on February 22 Pope Francis will create the first cardinals of his pontificate. This means that at least one month before that date he will make public the list with the names of the churchmen he believes worthy of receiving the scarlet.

Creating new cardinals is a highly personal act of the pope, by which he can among other things influence the selection of his successor.

For this reason as well there is great curiosity over who will be the selections of Pope Francis.

In the past predictions could be made with a fair chance of guessing at least a good number of the new cardinals. It was enough to identify those occupants of ecclesiastical offices of longstanding “cardinalate tradition” – both in the curia and in the leadership of certain dioceses – who were still without the scarlet, and the trick was done.

But with Pope Francis, who has made surprise one of his management traits, the predictions are much more uncertain.

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 Chisholm priest won’t face abuse charges

MINNESOTA
Grand Forks Herald

DULUTH — No charges will be brought against a former Chisholm priest who was being investigated on child sex abuse allegations, St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin said Thursday.

Rubin had been investigating the Rev. Cornelius Kelleher, a retired priest who has been removed from ministry, for possible criminal charges after the Diocese of Duluth revealed in October that the priest had been removed from the ministry after abuse accusations.

While there may have been enough evidence to bring charges, the three-year statute of limitations for the disclosure has passed, Rubin said. Two other alleged victims of Kelleher also came forward during the investigation, Rubin said.

Rubin called the diocese’s initial decision to launch a private investigation rather than contacting authorities “unacceptable.” He said he has met with diocese officials to ensure that any future allegations are brought to investigators.

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.

Lynn leaves state prison, must face Sarmina

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

ALLISON STEELE, INQUIRER STAFF WRITER
LAST UPDATED: Friday, January 3, 2014

PHILADELPHIA Msgr. William J. Lynn was released from state prison Thursday, but before he returns to private life, he must again face the judge who put him behind bars.

After serving about 18 months in prison, Lynn left the prison in Waymart, in Northeastern Pennsylvania, on Thursday, a week after an appeals court overturned his child-endangerment conviction. Prosecutors are challenging the decision.

On Monday, Lynn is to appear before Common Pleas Court Judge M. Teresa Sarmina, who in 2012 sentenced him to three to six years in prison for his role in enabling priests to abuse children. The judge ordered Lynn to come to court Monday so she could outline his bail conditions personally.

Lynn’s attorney, Thomas A. Bergstrom, acknowledged that such a proceeding was unusual.

“The bail’s been set, the terms have been complied with, and he certainly understands the conditions,” Bergstrom said. “But we’ll be there.”

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.

Disgusted over D.A.’s Lynn verdict disgust

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

CHRISTINE M. FLOWERS, DAILY NEWS COLUMNIST
POSTED: Friday, January 3, 2014

SETH WILLIAMS says he’s “disgusted” by the Pennsylvania Superior Court’s decision reversing the child endangerment conviction of Monsignor William Lynn. Fair enough. He’s probably a tad peeved that his grand experiment in statutory interpretation, one which ignored the meaning of “ex post facto” in an effort to catch a priest, fell apart. He is apparently “disgusted” that a man who was charged with aiding and abetting the abuse of children gamed the legal system.

Well, let me take a moment to tell you what leaves me “disgusted.” I am “disgusted” at the continuation of a show trial that was flawed at the outset and which exploited the public’s legitimate anger at the evil crimes committed against children by a minority of Catholic men. I am also “disgusted” at the hypocrisy of those who seek justice by embracing injustice.

Monsignor Lynn is not an example of profound moral courage. He could have gone outside the chain of command and broken the creeping, deadly silence that protected perverted creatures and exposed innocent children to unspeakable harm. No one – not even those who personally know Monsignor Lynn and attest to his kindness and humility – gives him a pass on his failure to act. Even those who think he was the “fall guy” for his superiors think that, at a human level, he could and should have done more.

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.

Attorney: D.A. ‘way out of line’ for criticising reversal of church official’s conviction

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

MENSAH M. DEAN, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER DEANM@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-568-8278
POSTED: Friday, January 3, 2014

THE LAWYER representing the Catholic church official whose child-endangerment conviction was overturned last week by the state Superior Court said yesterday that District Attorney Seth Williams was “unprofessional” for criticizing the ruling and the Archdiocese of Philadelphia’s decision to pay his client’s bail.

Thomas Bergstrom said he will send letters to the Pennsylvania Bar Association and the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania detailing Williams’ misconduct in response to Monsignor William Lynn’s case.

“I think Williams is way out of line. He’s a lawyer, he’s a public servant, an officer of the court. He is denigrating the court and denigrating the Archdiocese for assisting in the posting of bail for what is – at the moment – an innocent man,” Bergstrom told the Daily News.

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

Monsignor William Lynn Leaves State Prison, Some Parishioners Outraged At Archdiocese

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

By Ileana Diaz

PHILADELPHIA (CBS)–Monsignor William Lynn is out of the state prison where he’s been locked up for 18 months.

He was moved to the Philadelphia County Prison today after the Archdiocese helped post his $25,000 bail, getting him one step closer to freedom and sparking concern amongst many Catholics.

Voice of the Faithful member Nancy Mortimer-O’Brien, says, “It just shows they’re not really sincere if it comes to protecting church or the child we know where they stand.”

Lynn was charged with child endangerment for reassigning sexually abusive priests to other parishes instead reporting them to law enforcement.

That conviction was overturned when the Superior Court ruled Lynn was convicted under a law that didn’t apply to him.

Lynn is now waiting for an ankle bracelet and living arrangements in Philadelphia before he can walk.

“It doesn’t surprise me. I’m disappointed but this shows lack of resolve for change,” O’Brien says.

Catholic parishioners at an afternoon mass said few words about Lynn, but did comment on the Church’s willingness to help.

“I think its money that could’ve been well spent in other places like Catholic education,” says parishioner Donna Whiteoak.

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.

Rubin urges quick notification on abuse

MINNESOTA
Virginia MN

STAFF REPORT

DULUTH — St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin said Thursday that Catholic diocesan officials in Duluth should have immediately involved law enforcement after learning a priest had allegedly sexually abused a child.

Rubin said in a news release that an adult had reported in 2012 to the Diocese of Duluth about “a credible allegation of sexual abuse by Father Cornelius Kelleher, which abuse had occurred many years ago.”

The adult came forward when she learned that Kelleher had moved to a residence near her home. The incident occurred three years after the statute of limitations expired. The diocese did act promptly to remove Kelleher from where he was residing and under church law prohibited him from acting publicly as a priest.

Two other women also came forward and said they had been victims of sexual abuse as children by Kelleher, and also beyond the statute of limitations, the county attorney 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.

Victim’s attorneys press St. Cloud bishop to release list of accused priests

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Written by
Marta Jewson

Sexual abuse survivor Robert Ethen and his attorneys, Jeff Anderson and Mike Bryant, are calling for Bishop Donald Kettler to release a list of 26 priests in the St. Cloud diocese accused of sexual abuse.

At a news conference Thursday Anderson said a civil lawsuit filed this week in Stearns County District Court was an “invitation” for Kettler to “step up and simply do the right thing.”

Anderson, who represents many clergy sex abuse victims, said he believes there are likely many more abusers, and their names must be publicly released to protect the community.

Ethen said when he first went to inform the local diocese of the abuse he was nervous he would not be taken seriously. But when he named Father James A. Thoennes as the offender, he said, the person he was talking to pulled out a large file tied to the priest.

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

St. Louis County Attorney Rubin calls Duluth Diocese delays ‘unacceptable’

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By: Tom Olsen, Duluth News Tribune

The Diocese of Duluth’s decision to conduct a private investigation rather than contact authorities about child sexual abuse allegations against a former priest was “unacceptable,” St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin said Thursday.

Such delays hamper official investigations. But the county’s top prosecutor said he’s now satisfied that he and the diocese have put together an appropriate road map for future abuse reporting.

“The Diocese and I have agreed it is important for a representative of the Diocese to immediately advise any reporting victim of their right to contact law enforcement or social services through the Initial Intervention Unit at the time any allegation of sexual abuse by a priest is reported,” Rubin wrote in a letter issued Thursday.

After the Tuesday release of a list of former diocese priests deemed “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of minors, officials said they expected many previously unknown victims to come forward.
Verne Wagner, the northern Minnesota director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said Thursday that he has already received several phone calls from victims who had not previously reported their abuse.

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 released after sex-abuse appeal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Times-Tribune

PHILADELPHIA – A Roman Catholic church official who won an appeal of his landmark conviction in the priest-abuse scandal left a Pennsylvania prison on Thursday after 18 months behind bars.

Monsignor William Lynn left the state prison in Waymart, prison spokeswoman Terri Fazio said, and was taken by the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office to a city jail, where he was to be fitted with an electronic monitoring device.

He will then be released, probably to the custody of a family member, one of his lawyers said. It was not clear late Thursday when that would happen.

The attorney, Thomas Bergstrom, declined to say where in Philadelphia his client will live while prosecutors appeal the Superior Court ruling.

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.

January 2, 2014

Reports of Sexual Abuse by Clergy within the Duluth Diocese

MINNESOTA
St. Louis County Attorney Mark S. Rubin

The sexual abuse of a child is a felony offense. Jurisdiction to prosecute the case after investigation by law enforcement lies with the County Attorney’s Office. To enable us to hold offenders accountable and to protect our children, response to a report of sexual abuse needs to be compassionate and according to the law.

All allegations involving the sexual abuse of children by a priest or anyone, should always be reported. Allegations of sexual misconduct occurring within three years of the disclosure are required to be reported to either law enforcement or social services under the Minnesota Reporting of Maltreatment of Minors Law. These agencies then cross-report with each other. All other incidents should be reported, as they involve the alleged violation of criminal statutes. The issue of whether the statute of limitations has expired should be left up to the investigating agency. This is what should be done whether or not the victim wishes to remain anonymous. If there is any doubt about whether reporting is mandatory, the appropriate action is to report the matter to the responsible law enforcement agency or social services.

Earlier this year after conducting an internal investigation with the assistance of a professional, independent investigator, the Diocese of Duluth disclosed it had received from an adult in 2012, a credible allegation of sexual abuse by Father Cornelius Kelleher which abuse had occurred many years ago. The reporting victim requested that her privacy be respected and as a result, the Diocese did not report the allegation to law enforcement or social services. However, the Diocese did take immediate appropriate action to remove Father Kelleher from where he was residing as requested by the victim and has, pursuant to Church law, prohibited him from further acting publicly as a priest.

These actions addressed the voiced concern of the victim, however, this matter should also have been promptly reported to law enforcement or social services.

I have met with Diocesan leadership for the purposes of addressing the issues involved in the Father Kelleher matter and to provide guidance to the Diocese to ensure it is responding according to the law and in the best interests of victims.

Regarding the matter involving specific allegations against Father Kelleher, at my suggestion and due to the expressed privacy concerns of the victim, the Diocese gave the victim my name and telephone number. Since then, she and I have spoken on a number of occasions by telephone. She is an adult and is adamant that her privacy be respected and preserved.

In my conversations with her, it became apparent the incident occurred approximately three years beyond the expiration of the statute of limitations that would otherwise have allowed my office to prosecute the case after an investigation by law enforcement. The statute of limitations is a law that limits the number of years that can pass from the date the alleged incident of abuse occurred and the date charges can be filed. She remained adamant that she did not want the matter investigated further or prosecuted, even if the statute of limitations had not run. Her reason for reporting the incident in 2012 was because Father Kelleher had moved into a residence very close to her home.

I have subsequently received telephone calls from two other women who also reported being victims of acts of sexual abuse by Father Kelleher. These incidents also occurred a few years beyond the expiration of the statute of limitations. These women wanted to remain anonymous and did not want to report it to law enforcement, but wanted the matter brought to my attention to support the credibility of the first victim’s 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.

Pedophile priest loses teaching licence

CANADA
Windsor Star

Sarah Sacheli
Jan 02, 2014

More than six decades after William Hodgson Marshall began sexually abusing male students, the former priest has lost his licence to teach.

The Ontario College of Teachers announced in December it has revoked Marshall’s credentials. The college began disciplinary proceedings against the retired teacher and principal after he pleaded guilty in 2011 to 16 counts of indecent assault of minors and one count of sexual assault for incidents that occurred between 1952 and 1986 while Marshall taught at Assumption and Holy Names in Windsor and other Catholic high schools in Toronto and Sudbury.

Marshall later pleaded guilty to further counts related to assaults on two boys in Saskatoon.

Marshall is 91 and is said to have cancer. He hasn’t taught in decades. But that shouldn’t preclude the college from going after his licence, said spokesman Brian Jamieson.

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 D.A. Throws A Temper Tantrum; Lynn Still In Jail

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2014

By Ralph Cipriano
for Bigtrial.net

A week after a panel of Superior Court judges reversed his landmark conviction and ordered him to be “discharged forthwith,” Msgr. William J. Lynn remains in jail.

It’s not known whether Lynn will be out by Sunday, his 63rd birthday. But on 12:30 p.m. Monday, the prisoner is scheduled to return to the courtroom of Judge M. Teresa Sarmina, for another ritualistic humiliation.

“I want him in front of me when I tell him what his conditions are,” Judge Sarmina warned ominously from the bench last week, regarding what she described as her “conditions pending bail.” This is the same judge who presided over Lynn’s now discredited show trial in 2012, a judge whose application of the law in that case was unanimously panned by a panel of three Superior Court judges as “fundamentally flawed.”

Sarmina isn’t through with Lynn yet. Concerned about about the monsignor’s possible flight to the Vatican, the judge has ordered the official scapegoat of the archdiocese prosecution to turn in his passport and put up $250,000 bail. She also wants the monsignor to wear an electronic ankle bracelet, and report on a weekly basis to a Philadelphia parole officer.

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.

Gill Memorial Boys’ Home (Or: Australia Is A Democracy, Not A Nomikocracy)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Salvation Army’s Gill Memorial Boys’ Home will be one of the four Children’s Homes which will be covered by the next hearings of the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The Home was opened in 1939 by then Australian Prime Minister Lyons, and closed in 1980. It catered for about 90 boys, aged from 3 to 18 years old.

The Salvos are still fighting compensation case from the Home, including in the courts. It clearly is resisting the payment of reasonable compensations. The revelations about the Home will be typical of those at the other three Salvation Army Boys’ Homes which the enquiry will consider – Alkira Indooroopilly Boys’ Home (the author’s old Home), Riverview Training Farm (see previous posting) and Bexley Boys’ Home (see yesterday’s posting).

Ralph Doughty, 80, (pictured above) entered the Home at age seven, when his mother died. His father had been a World War 1 veteran. He was there for 10 years. Recently, he has filed a civil claim against the Salvation Army for $10 million, or as he puts it, $1 million for each year. He claims that the Salvation Army has told him that it will use delaying tactics so that he will die before the case is resolved.

Despite having previously offered Dr. Doughty a $150,000 ex-gratia payment ((plus $3,000 for psychiatrists fees), including a clause saying he will not pursue further civil claims, the Salvos have entered an unusual statement to the courts. It would “not admit” that Mr Doughty ever resided at Gill Memorial Home, that he was abused or that he still suffers psychologically from any alleged abuse.

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.

Hearing Friday …

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Hearing Friday Will Address Archdiocese and Diocese’s Attempt to Change or Clarify Judge’s Order to Release Additional Names of Priests Accused of Abuse

(St. Paul, MN) – On Friday, January 3, 2014 at 11:00 AM Ramsey County District Court Judge John Van de North will hold a hearing to address his previous order that called for the public release the names of priests with allegations of abuse which became known to the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona after 2004.

On December 3 Judge Van de North ordered the Archdiocese and Diocese to release two sets of names. First, they had to release the 46 names that they compiled as of 2004. Next the Archdiocese and Diocese were supposed to release all additional names that they learned about after 2004 by January 6, 2014. The Archdiocese and Diocese both filed letters with the court seeking to change or clarify the release of the additional names. The abuse survivor opposed that change and a hearing was set for tomorrow at 11 AM.

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.

Sartell Man Brings Sex-Abuse Lawsuit to St. Cloud Diocese [AUDIO]

MINNESOTA
WJON

[with audio]

By Alex Svejkovsky January 2, 2014

WAITE PARK — A Sartell man who says he was sexually abused by a priest in the mid-1960s is filing a lawsuit against the Diocese of St. Cloud.

In 1993, Robert Ethen told attorneys he was abused by Father James A. Thoennes and is filing the lawsuit against the diocese so that no child has to go through what he did.

Ethen says he tried to talk to Bishop Donald Kettler personally to see if he was going to release the names just as other diocese around the state.

In 2003, the Diocese of St. Cloud admitted there were 26 priests who worked in the Diocese who had been accused of sexually molesting minors.

Attorney Jeff Anderson says it’s time to release the names of the credibly accused priests of the St. Cloud diocese and to stop keeping secrets.

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John Paul II the Holy Father of Lies! Cardinal Dziwisz book: “JPII knew nothing” about bestial pedophile priest Fr. Maciel is Vatican Titanic Deceits

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

Children must call “Father” – only their own biological fathers or adoptive fathers – and they must not give away this unique paternal title and allegiance to other men on earth.

Children must call “Father” – only their own biological fathers or adoptive fathers – because these lay men alone deserve this unique title which they have rightfully earned through their daily labour and lifetime dedication.

Lay men must TAKE BACK their unique legal titles as “Fathers” because it is they who truly care and provide for their own children through their daily hard work!

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Attorney’s press St. Cloud bishop to release list of accused priests

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

[court document]

Written by
Marta Jewson

Robert Ethen, who says he is a survivor of sexual abuse by a priest, and his attorneys, Jeff Anderson and Mike Bryant, are calling for Bishop Donald Kettler to release the list of 26 priests in the St. Cloud diocese accused of sexual abuse.

At a news conference Thursday Anderson said a civil lawsuit filed this week in Stearns County District Court was an “invitation” for Kettler to “step up and simply do the right thing.”

Anderson, who represents many clergy sex abuse victims, said he believes there are likely many more and their names must be publicly released to protect the community.

When given the chance to speak, Ethen dropped his head in his hands before addressing the media gathered for the news conference. The lawsuit accuses the Rev. James A. Thoennes of abusing Ethen in the mid-1960s.

“I don’t want another child hurt,” Ethen said, while explaining his decision to file the lawsuit.

Anderson has sued other dioceses in the state and lists of names were released in December by the Minneapolis-St. Paul archdiocese, Winona and Duluth dioceses, and by St. John’s Abbey after a Ramsey County judge ordered the disclosure.

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PA-Victims to Philly archbishop: don’t give Lynn a job

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON JANUARY 02, 2014

For immediate release: Thursday, January 2

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 again call on Archbishop Charles Chaput to reassure parents, parishioners and the public that he won’t put Msgr. William Lynn back on the job anywhere.

There’s some doubt about whether Msgr. Lynn can be criminally prosecuted for his wrongdoing. There is no doubt, however, that he did wrong. And his wrongdoing was repeated and serious – knowingly putting proven, admitted and credibly accused child molesters into new parishes without warning parents or telling police.

So we’re upset that Archbishop Charles Chaput paid Lynn’s bail. Chaput’s action sends the worst possible message to current and former Catholic employees: “No matter how recklessly, callously and deceitfully you danger kids and protect predators, the Catholic hierarchy will help you.”

Now, Chaput could add insult to injury – and send another distressing message – by giving Msgr. Lynn another assignment. We hope that Chaput won’t do this. In fact, we hope Chaput will show some compassion and sensitivity, and put the fears of Philadelphia Catholics and victims at rest, by publicly announcing that Msgr. Lynn will be given no position – now or ever.

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St. Louis County Attorney releases statement on Duluth Diocese sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Northlands News Center

January 2, 2014

Duluth, MN (NNCNOW.com) — St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin is voicing his concerns that the Duluth Diocese never reported sexual abuse of a minor by a priest to law enforcement following last week’s release of names of priests accused of sexual abuse.

In the letter, Rubin says the allegations came too late, after the statute of limitations had expired. The County Attorney says he has spoken with three women who told him they were abused by Father Cornelius Kelleher, however, none of them wanted to report the allegations to law enforcement.

Rubin did acknowledge though that the Diocese of Duluth took immediate action to remove Father Kelleher from where he was residing and prohibited him from further acting publicly acting as a priest after one of the women had reported it to the Diocese.

According to the Diocese, the victim asked that her privacy be respected and as a result, the allegations of sexual abuse were not reported to law enforcement or social services.

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St. Louis County Attorney: No charges against former priest

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By: News Tribune staff, Duluth News Tribune

No charges will be brought against a former Chisholm priest who was being investigated on child sex abuse allegations, St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin announced today.

Rubin had been investigating the Rev. Cornelius Kelleher, a retired priest who has been removed from ministry, for possible criminal charges after the Diocese of Duluth revealed in October that the priest had been removed from the ministry after abuse accusations.

While there may have been enough evidence to bring charges, the statute of limitations of three years for the disclosure has passed, Rubin said. Two other alleged victims of Kelleher also came forward during the investigation, Rubin said.

Rubin called the diocese’s initial decision to launch a private investigation rather than contacting authorities “unacceptable.” He said he has met with diocese officials to ensure that any future allegations are brought to investigators

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St. Louis County attorney: Abuse must be reported

MINNESOTA
Seattle PI

By AMY FORLITI, Associated Press
Updated 11:01 am, Thursday, January 2, 2014

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The lead prosecutor in St. Louis County says the Diocese of Duluth should have gone to police immediately after learning a priest was accused of sexually abusing a child.

County Attorney Mark Rubin says the diocese waited 15 months before notifying authorities that the Rev. Cornelius Kelleher was accused of abusing a girl years ago.

The alleged victim is now an adult and went to church officials in 2012. Rubin says the diocese removed Kelleher from ministry in 2013.

Rubin says two more women have since told him Kelleher also abused them years ago.

Rubin says he’s met with diocesan officials, and they now realize they must promptly report allegations.

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County Attorney’s Statement on Abuse Allegations

MINNESOTA
WDIO

Created: 01/02/2014

St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin issued the following statement regarding reports of sexual abuse by clergy within the Duluth Diocese:

The sexual abuse of a child is a felony offense. Jurisdiction to prosecute the case after investigation by law enforcement lies with the County Attorney’s Office. To enable us to hold offenders accountable and to protect our children, response to a report of sexual abuse needs to be compassionate and according to the law.

All allegations involving the sexual abuse of children by a priest or anyone, should always be reported. Allegations of sexual misconduct occurring within three years of the disclosure are required to be reported to either law enforcement or social services under the Minnesota Reporting of Maltreatment of Minors Law. These agencies then cross-report with each other. All other incidents should be reported, as they involve the alleged violation of criminal statutes. The issue of whether the statute of limitations has expired should be left up to the investigating agency. This is what should be done whether or not the victim wishes to remain anonymous. If there is any doubt about whether reporting is mandatory, the appropriate action is to report the matter to the responsible law enforcement agency or social services.

Earlier this year after conducting an internal investigation with the assistance of a professional, independent investigator, the Diocese of Duluth disclosed it had received from an adult in 2012, a credible allegation of sexual abuse by Father Cornelius Kelleher which abuse had occurred many years ago. The reporting victim requested that her privacy be respected and as a result, the Diocese did not report the allegation to law enforcement or social services. However, the Diocese did take immediate appropriate action to remove Father Kelleher from where he was residing as requested by the victim and has, pursuant to Church law, prohibited him from further acting publicly as a priest.

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Prosecutor: Allegations of Clergy Abuse Came Too Late

MINNESOTA
WDIO

St. Louis County Attorney Mark Rubin says he cannot prosecute alleged cases of sexual abuse by clergy because the cases were reported after the statute of limitations expired and three alleged victims do not wish to pursue charges.

On Tuesday, the Catholic Diocese of Duluth released a list of priests who had been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of a minor. The allegations stretch across the ten-county diocese from 1950 to the present. Most of the clergymen are now deceased.

In a statement issued Thursday, Rubin said the allegations were not made until the statute of limitations had expired. He said he had spoken with three women who said they were abused by Father Cornelius Kelleher, but, besides the statute of limitations issue, none wished to have the allegations turned over to law enforcement.

“The fact that these courageous women have come forward for the first time after so many years have passed exemplifies the harsh reality that sexual abuse has a life-long impact on victims. The women were afraid to tell anyone at the time the sexual abuse had occurred. Their fear was that they would not be believed and that matters would only be worse for them. These continue to be the concerns we hear from many victims similarly situated,” Rubin said.

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‘Vatican-Dominican pact helps pedophiles’, priest agrees with review

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- One of most outspoken Catholic priests on Thursday said he agrees with revising the sweeping pact in effect for more than half a century between the Vatican and the Dominican Republic, known as the Concordat, slammed by one of the country’s leading evangelists.

Catholic Youth Ministry Coordinator Luis Rosario said 30 years ago his thesis was over the need of an overall review of the Concordat, because in his view that kind of agreement has to be revised as time passes.

He affirmed that some parts of the pact aren’t being enforced, and as an example cited the ban of divorce, because that has been repealed by local laws.

Lauds Medina

Speaking at House of the Youth, Rosario lauded president Danilo Medina’s attendance at two religious services in various churches, “which helps the understand that there should be unity among the people. Times must and should change.”

Agreement criticized

During a religious service on Wednesday leading evangelist Ezequiel Molina slammed the Concordat, which in his view protects priests accused of pedophilia. “Many have south to take these pedophiles to court so they pay for their sin, for their harm to society and youth, and they might not be.”

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KTVZ: Supporters Of Removed Bend Priest Hold Vigil

OREGON
OPB

Father James Radloff was told in August he was being removed from his post at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic in Bend. On New Year’s Eve, about 100 parishioners gathered outside the old church downtown to pray for the pastor, who they believe was a victim of injustice.

“Many of us feel that he was not treated with dignity and respect when he was relieved of his duty as pastor,” parishioner Paul Imwalle said.

He says Tuesday night’s vigil was not a a protest, just a time for the congregation to pray for the former priest.

No one has said publicly why Radloff was asked to leave. It’s a closely guarded secret that Bishop Liam Carey of the Diocese of Baker and Radloff have agreed not to reveal.

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The Rev. Bob Nugent, silenced for his work with gay Catholics, dies at 76

UNITED STATES
Religion News Servicei

Kevin Eckstrom | Jan 2, 2014

WASHINGTON (RNS) The Rev. Robert Nugent, a Catholic priest who was silenced by the Vatican for his work with gay and lesbian Catholics, died Wednesday (Jan. 1) after a three-month battle with cancer. He was 76.

In many ways, the scrutiny of Nugent’s activism symbolized the Vatican’s approach to all talk of homosexuality under Popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI — what one gay Catholic group called a “witch hunt” — compared to the more tolerant “who am I to judge?” tone set recently by Pope Francis.

Nugent, a member of the Salvatorians religious order, co-founded the Maryland-based New Ways Ministry in 1977 with Sister Jeannine Gramick to build bridges between the gay community and the Catholic Church. Their activities drew repeated condemnation from U.S. Catholic leaders in the 1980s.

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Be gentle with yourself

UNITED STATES
Stop Baptist Predators

Christa Brown

“When the truth is spoken and it don’t make no difference, something in your heart goes cold.”
— Bruce Springsteen

Trauma experts confirm the critical importance of social context in determining how people process traumatic events. If traumatized people are supported by a caring community, they may often do quite well even after terrible events. But when traumas are inflicted on a child by someone who is supposed to take care of the child, and when the child experiences those traumas repeatedly, and when the child’s community colludes to deny the reality, and when the child is not allowed to feel what he feels or give voice to what he knows, then the child’s mind cannot process what has happened and the trauma embeds itself more deeply.

This truth about the importance of context manifests itself in the stories of clergy sex abuse survivors. These are people who, in childhood, experienced a terrible crime, but for whom the traumatic impact is typically derived from much more than the predatory acts of a single person. Rather, when the offender is a much-trusted minister, the degradation of childhood rape and molestation is often exponentially magnified by the community’s long-continuing efforts to minimize, deny, and cover up – i.e., by the context. We have seen this pattern over and over again.

Thus, the context that surrounds clergy sex abuse makes it a classic context for giving rise to long-term trauma-related issues. For those who experience such traumas during the vulnerable developmental periods of childhood and adolescence, the impact is often more profound than is encompassed within the usual parameters of a post-traumatic-stress-disorder diagnosis. Generally, the diagnosis of PTSD was developed in connection with adults and does not take into account the ways in which chronic, repeated traumas affect a child’s development.

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Assignment Record – Rev. Arthur A. Falvey, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Arthur Falvey was a priest of the California Province of the Society of Jesus, ordained in 1930. Most of his career was spent in California as a faculty member of Jesuit high schools and colleges. He died in 1966 in Nevada, where he had lived and worked for a short while. In 2009 the Jesuits settled with a man who claimed Falvey sexually abused him over a 4-year period in Sacramento, beginning in 1954 when the man was a 7-year-old boy. Falvey was the brother of Rev. Mark Falvey, s.j., who was accused of sexually abusing at least 10 children.

Ordained: 1930
Died: Feb. 23, 1966

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Monsignor Lynn’s guilt

UNITED STATES
Spiritual Politics

Mark Silk | Jan 2, 2014

To its credit, the archdiocese of Philadelphia responded to a Pennsylvania appeals court’s overturning of the criminal conviction of Msgr. William Lynn last week with the statement: “We recognize that today’s news is especially difficult for survivors and their families. We profoundly regret their pain.”

Whether their pain will be alleviated by yesterday’s news that the archdiocese has helped post Lynn’s $250,000 bail may be doubted. But at least Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput didn’t follow the lead of the Catholic League’s Bill Donohue in acclaiming the man who managed sexual abuse cases for the archdiocese for many years and denouncing those who wanted to hold him accountable.

“The guilty parties that worked overtime to convict an innocent man—they include attorneys, judges, newspapers, professional “victims’ groups,” activists, TV talking heads—have been disgraced,” Donohue wrote. “Msgr. Lynn spent 18 months in prison because of dishonest people who harbor an anti-Catholic agenda. We expect he will soon be released. God bless him.”

To understand what innocence means in this context, It is important to understand the basis for the appeals court’s action. The statute under which Lynn was convicted applied to ”a parent, guardian or other person supervising the welfare of a child under 18 years of age” — and the court disagreed with the prosecution’s theory, accepted by the trial judge, that Lynn had supervisory responsibility for the welfare of the child abused by Rev. Edward V. Avery. Yet it made sufficiently clear that the conviction would have stood had Lynn been charged under the statute as it was revised in 2007, extending responsibility explicitly to ”a person that employs or supervises such a person”:

Constrained by our standard of review, we cannot dispute that the Commonwealth presented more than adequate evidence to sufficiently demonstrate that Appellant the prioritized the Archdiocese’s reputation over the safety of potential victims of sexually abusive priests and, by inference, that the same prioritization dominated Appellant’s handling of Avery…

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Catholics have mixed reaction to Archdiocese helping bail out William Lynn

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia has helped Monsignor William Lynn post $25,000 to bail him out after his landmark conviction was overturned last week. His entire bail is $250,000 but is allowed to be released after posting 10 percent.

Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams, himself a Catholic, criticized the church’s decision.

“Well, he committed those acts and he’s responsible for what he does and he should be responsible for paying his bail,” said Walt Kenney from Northeast Philly.

Jim Clearkin, from Ambler said regardless of what Lynn did, he deserved the help because his conviction was overturned.

“I also feel somewhat that Monsignor Lynn might be a scapegoat for others. If he was wrongly convicted, he should have been given bail,” said Clearkin.

“I really don’t have a problem with it, considering it sounds like he was wrongly convicted. Not that I don’t know that he didn’t do anything wrong, but it sounds like legally, he should not have been convicted, so I don’t see a problem with them posting bail for him,” he added.

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Philadelphia priest released from prison after appeal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Times Herald

By The Associated Press
POSTED: 01/02/14

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Roman Catholic church official has left state prison after 18 months because he won an appeal of his landmark conviction in the priest-abuse scandal.

A state prison spokeswoman, Terri Fazio, says Monsignor William Lynn was released Thursday from the prison in Waymart in northeastern Pennsylvania.

The Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office is taking Lynn to a Philadelphia jail to be fitted with an electronic monitoring device. After that, he’ll be released.

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Monsignor Released After Archdiocese Helps Him Post Bail

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

[with video]

A Catholic monsignor locked up for the past 18 months as part of the clergy sex-abuse sandal stepped out of a Pennsylvania prison this morning.

Monsignor William Lynn was freed around 10 a.m. Thursday after the Roman Catholic Church helped him post bail earlier in the week.

Sheriff’s officers are expected to transfer Lynn temporarily to Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility where he will be processed and told rules for his release.

Defense lawyer Thomas Bergstrom said required electronic monitoring will track Lynn. The priest’s attorneys already turned over his passport, which was also a condition of his release.

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Philadelphia priest to be released from prison Thursday

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Times Herald

By The Associated Press
POSTED: 01/02/14

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Roman Catholic church official is set to leave prison after 18 months because he won an appeal of his landmark conviction in the priest-abuse scandal.

A state prison spokeswoman, Terri Fazio, says Monsignor William Lynn is scheduled to be released Thursday from the prison in Waymart, in northeastern Pennsylvania.

Lynn is set to be taken to Philadelphia, where he must remain on electronic monitoring while prosecutors appeal the Superior Court ruling.

The 62-year-old Lynn was the first U.S. church official ever charged for hiding complaints that priests were molesting children. He was the point person for those complaints in Philadelphia from 1992-2004.

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Looking at us in the review mirror

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

Teacher-turned-talk show host Dom Giordano is heard weekdays 9AM to 12 noon on WPHT 1210-AM Radio. Contact Dom at www.domgiordano.com.

POSTED: Thursday, January 2, 2014

INSIGHTS for this column often come in strange places. I was getting my final thoughts together for my year in review for all the issues that affect parents, kids and teachers.

I was getting changed in a men’s locker room when two guys were discussing Monsignor William Lynn and the Superior Court decision. The appeals judge said that Lynn, by statute, was not able to be held legally responsible for his actions, although even the Superior Court said that “Lynn prioritized the Archdiocese’s reputation over the safety of potential victims of sexually abusive priests.”

One guy actually defended Lynn, claiming that he had to do what he did because he had taken a vow of obedience.

On my radio show that day, I had heard rationalizations like this to try to spin Lynn’s actions. It clearly struck me that this is the both the biggest and worst local story of the year involving kids and parents.

It’s the worst because it opens all the old wounds. It also undermines the good work of Archbishop Charles Chaput, who has judiciously worked his way through a multitude of cases involving allegations against priests. My hope is that District Attorney Seth Williams appeals the Superior Court decision and wins, so that Lynn is returned to jail.

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Appeal to clergy sex ruling could affect future cases

MISSOURI
KCTV

[with video]

By Betsy Webster, News Reporter

KANSAS CITY, MO (KCTV) –
A Missouri Court of Appeals is questioning a legal rule that has essentially treated religious schools differently from public schools when it comes to child sex crimes.

The case in question involves a man who recently reported a crime he says happened 40 years ago at the hands of his priest and teacher at St. Elizabeth’s in Waldo.

David Tate filed the lawsuit against Father Michael Tierney and the Diocese of Kansas City and Saint Joseph in 2011. He said he had repressed memories of his abuse until he heard of other victims filing suit.

It was the early 1970s. Tate was an eighth-grader at St. Elizabeth’s School. Tierney was his teacher and the priest who supervised altar boys at the church. Tate was an altar boy at the time.

Tate’s lawyer says Tierney’s supervising priest was aware that he was a risk around children.

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Candidly Speaking: Bayit Yehudi cannot remain silent over Rabbi Druckman

ISRAEL
The Jerusalem Post

By ISI LEIBLER
01/01/2014

Rabbi Chaim Druckman, one of the most prominent rabbis of the national-religious movement, has responded to Rabbi Mordechai Elon’s conviction for indecent assault by force against a minor by employing him as a teacher in the Or Etzion Yeshiva where Druckman serves as the rosh yeshiva. This has sent shockwaves through the religious-Zionist community, and also poses a serious challenge to the Bayit Yehudi political party.

Naftali Bennett, the head of Bayit Yehudi, ran on a platform which highlighted religious reform. A charismatic personality, he communicates well with secular Israelis and has even succeeded in projecting himself as a trendy liberal. But until now, due either to inability or unwillingness, he has failed to confront the tough issues of religious reform.

Bayit Yehudi cannot remain on the sidelines in relation to such a fundamental issue as sexual misconduct within the rabbinic community. If it does not respond appropriately to this latest imbroglio, it will contribute to its own demise.

It is not my intention to provide a detailed analysis of the tragic Elon issue. Rabbi Elon was one of the leading and most charismatic rabbis within the religious- Zionist movement. His weekly Torah television presentations were widely popular. He was at one time head of the renowned Yeshivat Hakotel, headed the Horev School and was considered a candidate for chief rabbi. To this day he retains numerous followers who insist on his innocence.

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Monsignor Lynn not out of prison yet

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

JULIE SHAW, DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER SHAWJ@PHILLYNEWS.COM, 215-854-2592
POSTED: Thursday, January 2, 2014

MONSIGNOR William Lynn has not been released from state prison in northeastern Pennsylvania yet, but life is looking rosier for him in the new year.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia on New Year’s Eve posted $25,000, or 10 percent of his $250,000 bail, enough to free him.

But Lynn, the Archdiocese’s former secretary for clergy, still needs to have his electronic-monitoring system set up and may not be freed “until the end of the week or next week,” his attorney, Thomas Bergstrom, said yesterday.

The holiday meant “no one’s working,” Bergstrom said, so Lynn, who is at the State Correctional Institution at Waymart in Wayne County, will have to wait.

Lynn could be back in Philadelphia in time for his 63rd birthday on Sunday. Bergstrom said Lynn will stay in the city when he is hooked up with an electronic-monitoring ankle bracelet, but would not say specifically where Lynn will live.

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Op-Ed: The impact of the court decision to reverse Lynn’s conviction

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia City Paper

By Ralph Cipriano
Published: 01/02/2014

The overturning of a criminal conviction is a rare event, with the odds of it occurring at less than 5 percent. Reversals in the criminal courts are “like diamonds,” as one local defense lawyer put it.

So it was a shocker on Dec. 26 when a panel of three state Superior Court judges unanimously ruled that the landmark conviction of Monsignor William J. Lynn should be reversed and he should be “discharged forthwith” from prison.

There may be more surprises when the alleged victim in the Lynn case takes the stand next June, when his civil case against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia is scheduled to go to trial.

Lynn, former secretary for clergy for the archdiocese from 1992 to 2004, was the first Catholic administrator in the country to go to jail for the sexual sins of the clergy — not for touching a child, but for failing to rein in the predator priests he supervised.

Though it reversed his 2012 conviction, the Superior Court judges noted there was evidence that he “prioritized the archdiocese’s reputation over the safety of potential victims.”

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The Review? Something New For A Change…

My Atheist Life

I asked a simple question of my readers. The response was about what I had thought it would be.

“Can someone please show me a case in the last few months of child sexual abuse / assault that does not involve a priest, pastor, or some religion related individual?”

When I tried to get some actual numbers myself I found some interesting statistics.

Information on Catholic sex abuse cases is about what you think it would be but with some surprise conclusions if you’ll allow some lateral thinking.

* Apparently the Catholic clergy are not the only religious organization to fail to stop sex abuse by their employees
*Catholicism does not decrease the incidence of sex abuse among its adherents
*There are a lot of theories as to why sex abuse is so high among the Catholic clergy
*The Catholic church has hidden sex abuse cases all over the planet

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Bexley Boys’ Home (Or: “Captain” Cane)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

Bexley Salvation Army Boys’ Home will be one of the institutions examined at the next hearings of the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, due to commence on 28th January. One of its former residents, Kevin Marshall, was interviewed for the government-owned Australian Broadcasting Corporation Television’s “Four Corners” investigative journalism program in 2003 (see link below). Two other former residents of that Home were also interviewed, but not named, and were filmed in “shadows”.

Bexley commenced as a Probationary Home for Boys in 1915, taking boys referred from the courts. It became a boys’ home in 1931. It was renamed Kolling Memorial Boys’ Home in 1967 and closed in 1979. When Bexley Boys’ Home was closed, the remaining boys were transferred to the Marrickville Children’s Residence. It is now renovated and used as the Salvation Army’s officer training facility and museum.

The enquiry will find certain things common to all Salvation Army Boys’ Homes. It will find that boys were given a number and not a name. [The author was no.32]. Extreme violence, for trivial transgressions, such as talking at the dinner table, not standing straight enough in line etc., was the norm.

Being put down psychologically also was routine, such as “we pulled you out of the gutter” or “your mother was a prostitute.” For boys with English as a second language, speaking in their native language was severely punished. This was in an era when there had been large scale European migration to Australia for the first time, and the official government policy was “assimilation”. That meant, in practice, become British. Now it is “multiculturalism.” A large proportion of inmates were there because, as children of migrants, there was usually no close relatives to care for them when their own parents were unable to do so.

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Lucas: A voice for the silent victims of abuse

OREGON
Statesman Journal

Written by
Dan Lucas
Commentary

Kelly Clark, an Oregon attorney who brought lawsuits against some large organizations on behalf of the victims of sexual abuse, died recently. As well as being a champion for victims of sexual abuse, he also was a self-acknowledged sexual victimizer several decades ago.

He worked to bring justice to victims of abuse within “institutions of trust” such as “the Catholic Church, the Boy Scouts of America, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and school districts.”

I’m writing this to recognize all of the other victims — of all forms of sexual abuse and sex crimes — who are still awaiting justice. The victims whom no one has stood up for yet. The victims who tried to get help from those who are supposed to help and were let down. The victims whose painful stories have not been told yet. The victims who’ve blocked out the painful memories and the victims who’ve succumbed to drugs, alcohol and even suicide because they couldn’t see hope through the pain and hopelessness.

My own brief experience researching and dealing with sexual predators in Oregon politics has shown me that for every known victim, there are many more unknown victims. Unknown to the public anyway.

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St Cloud Press Conference Today…

MINNESOTA
Legal Examiner

St Cloud Press Conference Today : Survivor Calls on Diocese of St. Cloud to Release List of 26 Priests Accused of Sexual Abuse of Minors

Posted by Mike Bryant
January 2, 2014

What: At a press conference on Thursday, sexual abuse survivor Robert Ethen along with his attorneys will:

· Announce the filing of a civil lawsuit seeking the release of the list of credibly accused priests from the Diocese of St. Cloud.

· Abuse survivor Robert Ethen will speak publically about his abuse in the mid-1960s by Father James A. Thoennes and the necessity of releasing the list of credibly accused priests in the St. Cloud diocese.

· In 2003, the Diocese of St. Cloud admitted there were 26 priests who worked in the Diocese who had been accused of sexually molesting minors. By keeping its list a secret the lawsuit alleges that the Diocese has harmed and continues to harm the Plaintiff, who is unable to protect others from sexual abuse by priests. The lawsuit also alleges that by choosing not to release the list the Diocese endangers the public in the communities where these unknown priests live and work.

· Similar lists have been released by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Diocese of Winona, the Diocese of Duluth, and St. John’s

When: Thursday, January 2, 2014 at 1:00 PM

Where: Law Office of Bradshaw & Bryant, PLLC
1505 Division St.
Waite Park, MN 56387

Who: Robert Ethen, a survivor of sexual abuse by Father James A. Thoennes, a priest of the Diocese of St. Cloud. Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul, Minnesota sexual abuse attorney. Mike Bryant, a sexual abuse attorney based in the St. Cloud, Minnesota area.

Notes: Copies of the complaint will be available at www.andersonadvocates.com

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Mo. judge gives St. Louis archdiocese until Friday to turn over names of accused priests

MISSOURI
TribTown

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: January 02, 2014

ST. LOUIS — A Missouri judge has ordered the Archdiocese of St. Louis to release by the end of the working day Friday the names of all priests accused of sexual abuse in the past 20 years.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch (http://bit.ly/19Jiw5D) reports St. Louis Circuit Judge Robert Dierker’s disclosure order also includes the names of those who made the complaints.

The judge said the archdiocese could withhold the names of those involved in cases the church determined were “unsubstantiated,” leaving it unclear what the archdiocese will ultimately release from 234 complaints identified by the court.

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January 1, 2014

Lawsuit presses St. Cloud diocese for priest list

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

A sexual abuse survivor and his attorneys plan to announce Thursday a civil lawsuit against the St. Cloud diocese seeking a list of priests credibly accused of abuse.

Robert Ethen and his attorneys Jeff Anderson and Mike Bryant will hold a press conference at 1 p.m. Thursday at the law office of Bradshaw & Bryant, Waite Park. The lawsuit was filed Tuesday afternoon in Stearns County District Court.

Ethen of Sartell will discuss the abuse he said occurred in the mid-1960s by the Rev. James A. Thoennes, according to a statement from Anderson’s office.

Thoennes was named in a 2009 lawsuit. That lawsuit accused the diocese of failing to alert parishioners that Thoennes was accused of abuse. He instead was moved from parish to parish, it said.

The statement from Anderson’s office says the diocese admitted in 2003 there were 26 priests who had been accused of sexually abusing children, but no names have been released.

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Lawsuit Demands Diocese of St. Cloud Release List of Priests Accused of Abuse

MINNESOTA
KSTP

Created: 01/01/2014

By: Cassie Hart

A lawsuit will demand that the Diocese of St. Cloud release a list of priests accused of sexual abuse.

A St. Paul attorney announced one of his clients will file a civil lawsuit asking for the list.

The client says he was abused by a priest in the 1960s, and says keeping the list secret is causing him additional harm.

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Monsignor Waits To Leave Prison After Church Helps Post Bail

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
My Fox Philly

PHILADELPHIA –
Monsignor William Lynn is still waiting to leave prison after the Archdiocese of Philadelphia helped post his quarter-million-dollars bail.

An appeals court overturned his conviction in a case linked to the priest-sex abuse scandal.

Lynn is the first U.S. church official ever convicted for his handling of abuse claims. He’ll be subject to electronic monitoring.

Prosecutors will try to restore the conviction.

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Owensboro police asked to investigate priest

KENTUCKY
Albany Times Union

OWENSBORO, Ky. (AP) — The Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office has asked the Owensboro Police Department to investigate allegations against a priest accused of inappropriate conduct with a minor.

The Owensboro Messenger-Inquirer reports (http://bit.ly/1g19fXB) the Catholic Diocese of Owensboro on Tuesday announced the temporary suspension of the Rev. John Meredith following an investigation.

A letter from Diocese of Owensboro Bishop William Medley says the Diocesan Review Board unanimously judged the allegation to be credible and urges compassion for the person who brought the matter to light.

Meredith has been a priest at Blessed Mother Catholic Church since 2008.

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MO-Victim to appeal “bizarre” ruling

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2014

For more info: David Clohessy ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com ), Barbara Dorris ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

Victim to appeal “bizarre” ruling
Catholic abuse case will move forward
Church not responsible for child sex crimes
The reason: abuse happened on private property
Missouri Supreme Court is expected to hear case this year

A man who says he was sexually assaulted as a child by a priest will soon ask the Missouri Supreme Court to reverse a ruling that ended his civil lawsuit against Kansas City Catholic officials. Clergy sex abuse victims called the court decision “bizarre” and harshly criticized KC Bishop Robert Finn for his defense tactics in the case.

In November, a western Missouri appeal court tossed out a case called John Doe D.T. v. the Kansas City Catholic diocese and Fr. Michael Tierney. In it, the court ruled that Catholic officials could not be held responsible for the alleged child sex crimes of Fr. Tierney because they occurred on private property, not church property.

This week, another court declined to hear the case and the victim’s attorney pledged to appeal it to the Missouri Supreme Court.

“The blame here squarely lies with Bishop Finn. He could have fought this case on the merits. Instead, he’s fighting it on technicalities, and in fact, on the most absurd technicality: where Fr. Tierney and his victim were standing when Fr. Tierney sodomized the child,” said Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, outreach director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“Imagine a painting company sending a known rapist on its payroll out to paint your mom’s house. He rapes her. Would the painter’s boss get ‘off the hook’ because the rape was not on company property?” asks David Clohessy of SNAP.

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St. Louis Archdiocese ordered to give priests’ names accused of sex abuse

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK

[with video]

Ryan Dean

ST. LOUIS (KSDK) – The Archdiocese of St. Louis has until Friday 5 p.m. to release the names of priests accused of sex abuse throughout the past 20 years, according to court documents released Tuesday morning.

The priests’ names will not be made public, according to the documents. They will remain sealed and will only be seen by the plaintiff and her lawyer in an ongoing civil case against the Archdiocese.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priest held a small demonstration Tuesday near the Cathedral Basilica applauding the ruling. However, they say the names of the accused should be made public.

“We think the public should be given these names. Several Catholic bishops across the country have released names voluntarily of predator priests. But, it takes an enormous and long legal struggle in this Archdiocese just to get the names turned over privately in litigation,” David Clohessy, director of SNAP, said.

This case started back in October 2011. The unnamed plaintiff accused the Archdiocese and some of its clergy of several wrongdoings including sexual abuse, intentional failure to supervise clergy and negligent supervision of a priest.

The Archdiocese of St. Louis released the following statement Tuesday, “The Archdiocese of St. Louis will review with its attorneys today’s court order for the release of identities of victims and accused clergy dating back many years that involve any substantiated allegation of sexual abuse.”

Tuesday’s court order indicates there are more than 200 cases of “accused individuals” during that time frame.

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Archdiocese Helps Priest Post Bail, DA Livid

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

[with video]

The Roman Catholic Church and attorneys for a former church official, who’s been locked up for the past 18 months related to the clergy sex-abuse scandal, have posted his bail.

Monsignor William Lynn’s attorneys posted 10-percent of the $250,000 bail, which was set after an appeals court overturned his conviction last week.

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia also “assisted” with providing the bail, spokesman Ken Gavin said.

Speaking on the issue on New Year’s Eve, Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams was livid over the archdioceses’ involvement.

“Clearly this sends the wrong message to all victims of child sexual abuse,” said Williams, who is Roman Catholic. “As a Roman Catholic, as I am, it sends the wrong message to [church members] that they’re going to use our funds, church money, to pay to release this man.”

Lynn is the first U.S. church official ever convicted for his handling of abuse claims. But an appeals court now says the child-endangerment felony didn’t apply to him.

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Diocese of Duluth to Release Names of Priests Credibly Accused of Sexual Abuse of Minors

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Statement of Attorney Mike Finnegan

(Duluth, MN) – The release of the list of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors is a good first step for the Diocese of Duluth.

We applaud the courageous survivors, including Michael DeRoche, for standing up and seeking the release of this list.

While we are encouraged by this first step, for there to be true transparency, the Diocese must also release the secret documents that it has on each priest on the list. These documents will show what the Bishops knew, when they knew it, and what they did in response.

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The Salvos And Asylum Seekers (Or: Having Your Cake And Eating It Too)

AUSTRALIA
lewisblayse.net

The Salvation Army became embroiled in controversy, including internally, when it agreed in 2012 to accept a $22 million contract from the Australian government in relation to the Manus Island and Nauru immigration detention centres for people who arrived by boat to claim asylum here. By 2013, the contract had risen to $74.9 million for the year to 31st January 2014. The new government has recently announced that the contract will not be renewed after that date.

[This blog does not make any comment on the issue of asylum seeker policy itself, and in the past has done the same with other political issues. While the author may have private opinions on Australia’s immigration policies, that is something for others to argue. What this blog is concerned with is the hypocrisy of the Salvation Army on the issue.]

For the benefit of readers from other countries, Australia has had many people set out from, mainly, Indonesia, in often unseaworthy boats headed for Australia to claim refugee status. Many of those boats have sunk en route, with the loss of at least 1,000 lives. Whether or not to accept these people has become a significant political issue in Australia.

Both of the two major political parties refuse to accept these people as genuine refugees and now detain them in centres on the small Pacific island nation of Nauru, and Manus Island, off the coast of Papua- New Guinea, while their claims are processed. Apparently, this policy will encourage many of them to return to their homeland, or face indefinite detention. Debate on all of this runs hot in the community, on both sides of the argument.

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‘Silenced’ priest says church here is bereft of leadership

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SARAH MACDONALD – 01 JANUARY 2014

Radical Irish priest Fr Tony Flannery has described the Irish church as “bereft of leadership” in a stinging rebuke to the Irish bishops.

The Redemptorist, who was silenced by the Vatican in February 2012 and is currently forbidden to say Mass or minister as a priest because of his liberal views, said he believed the Vatican’s “witch hunts” against liberal priests were over, thanks to the election of Pope Francis.

Speaking to the Irish Independent, the 66-year-old said of the spate of censures which targeted Irish clerics: “If Pope Francis had been elected a year earlier, I would not be in the position I am in, and neither would the other five priests in Ireland — because clearly Francis doesn’t approve of this.”

The Co Galway-based cleric, who had an unblemished 40-year record as a missioner until he was censured by the Vatican’s doctrinal watchdog, The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, said the Pope had made it clear that he “doesn’t want to be hearing this sort of thing in the Vatican and that he wanted this to be dealt with at the local level by the bishops.”

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Defying The Court, Protecting The Sinner

ISRAEL
The Jewish Week

Tue, 12/31/2013

Daniel Goldman and Miriam Zussman

Society in Israel and North America are different in many ways, but when it comes to understanding the dangers of sexual abuse of children by rabbis, communities in Israel and the diaspora must find ways to cooperate in making progress on this painful and complex issue.

Several years ago, a group called the Takanah Forum, was established by Orthodox leaders including Rabbis Aaron Lichtenstein, Shlomo Riskin, Eliyakim Levanon and David Stav along with Rabbanit Chana Henkin, Yaffa Gisser and others, as a watchdog for sexual abuse and harassment in the religious community. It found Rabbi Mordechai “Moti” Elon, a charismatic, much beloved rosh yeshiva of Yeshivat HaKotel who hosted television and radio programs in Israel, responsible for multiple cases of abuse of power, and sexual exploitation against students. They made the difficult but necessary decision to require Rabbi Elon be removed from teaching, or having any contact with youth in an effort to protect future victims.

Nearly four years ago Rabbi Elon violated his agreement with the Takanah Forum, and hence the issue was brought into the public domain. This past week, the Jerusalem District court convicted Rabbi Elon on two counts of indecent assault by force against a minor. Although the punishment was disappointingly light, the conviction should have caused deep repercussions in the Orthodox world – a sign that abuse can come from highly respected rabbis. Unfortunately not everyone is outraged at Rabbi Elon’s violations, and not everyone sees him as a dangerous and habitual predator.

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Rabbi Elon: Out Of The Classroom

ISRAEL
The Jewish Week

Tue, 12/31/2013

The sad story of Rabbi Moti Elon took another troubling twist last week. The once highly popular rosh yeshiva of Yeshivat HaKotel in Jerusalem, whose Torah teachings on radio and television attracted wide audiences beyond the Orthodox community, was sentenced by a local district court on two counts of indecent assault by force against a minor.

He had been accused in recent years of sexually abusing his students. And even after being reviewed and warned by a group of highly respected Torah scholars who make up the Takanah Forum, a watchdog group dealing with rabbinic abuse in the Orthodox community, he had violated their call for him to cease contact with young men. At that point the forum members reluctantly alerted the authorities, and they in turn brought Rabbi Elon to trial. He was convicted in August. (See Opinion piece, “Defying The Court, Protecting The Sinner,” online at thejewishweek.com.)

Beyond the sorrow, though, this week there was frustration and anger in the religious Zionist community when Rabbi Elon was given a surprisingly light sentence — six months of community service, three years probation and a fine, but no jail time. What’s more, Rabbi Elon insisted he had done nothing wrong, and won the continued support of Rabbi Haim Druckman, the spiritual leader of the Bnei Akiva network of schools in Israel and rosh yeshiva of Orot Etzion, who continues to allow Rabbi Elon to teach in the school despite strong complaints from families there.

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Cardinal Sinne farce will play hot topic for laughs

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Wednesday 1 January 2014

Mark Smith
Feature writer

In the last, quiet days of 2013, in a corner of the Tron bar in Glasgow, Steven Thomson is looking backwards and forwards – backwards to the 20th anniversary year of Glasgay!, the gay arts festival he has run since 2004, and forwards to some of the ideas he is working on for the 2014 festival.

The ideas include a farce about a Roman Catholic cardinal accused of sexual misbehaviour. Resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely deliberate.

Thomson thinks this idea of a comedy inspired by the Cardinal Keith O’Brien debacle is exactly the kind of work Glasgay! should be doing, although not the only kind. The mission statement he has composed for himself over the last few years is complicated: partly, it is about discussing the taboos around sexuality, including religious taboos; partly it is about being one of the few organisations in Scotland commissioning new theatre; partly it is about reflecting and inspiring changes in gay life and culture. And partly it is about having a good time.

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D.A. slames Philadelphia archdiocese for helping monsignor post bail after overturned conviction

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Fox News

Philadelphia prosecutors have blasted the city’s archdiocese for posting at least part of the bail for a monsignor whose conviction for crimes related to sex abuse was recently overturned.

Monsignor William Lynn’s lawyers said Tuesday that he had posted 10 percent of the $250,000 bail and surrendered his passport, both necessary conditions for him to be released while awaiting an appeal by prosecutors to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.

Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams accused the archdiocese of posting the entire $25,000 at a hastily called news conference Tuesday night. A spokesman would only say that the archdiocese “assisted” in posting bail for Lynn, but declined to specify an amount when contacted by The Philadelphia Inquirer.

Williams said the archdiocese’s action “sends the wrong message and protected pedophiles,” and called it “business as usual.”

Lynn, the former archdiocesan secretary for Philadelphia responsible for the supervision of priests, was the first U.S. church official ever convicted for his handling of abuse claims. He began serving a three-to-six-year prison sentence in June 2012. However, a Pennsylvania Superior Court judge ruled Monday that the child-endangerment law Lynn was convicted of violating did not apply to him.

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How Pope Francis took 2013 by storm

UNITED STATES
GlobalPost

Jason Berry

There is Pope Francis with angelic wings, smiling beatifically on the cover of the New Yorker magazine wherein James Carroll’s profile sings hope for a church reformed. And there is Francis featured as Time Magazine’s Person of the Year. They are just two of the many prominent public expressions of the new pope’s virtues that stand in high relief from the darkness that has shadowed the church for two decades now.

In the nine months since his election in Rome, the pope from Argentina, Jorge Mario Bergoglio, has become a moral statesman on the global stage, preaching an ethos of mercy, justice and peace. …

Cardinal Bergogolio was elected last March by cardinals aghast at a Roman Curia so balkanized that a butler leaked papal correspondence to the media; money-laundering at the Vatican Bank; and the clergy abuse scandals which sociologist Father Andrew M. Greeley, in 1992, called “perhaps the most serous crisis Catholicism has faced since the Reformation.”

How has Francis responded to the crisis? Do his early moves suggest structural changes to match his eloquence on mercy and justice? …

“Masses of people find themselves excluded and marginalized: without work, without possibilities, without any means of escape,” Francis wrote, “not the ‘exploited’ but the outcast, the ‘leftovers.’”

But the church has her own leftovers, like the 575 claimants sexually violated as children by priests in the Milwaukee archdiocese, which chose grinding bankruptcy litigation to slash its compensation to victims. A central issue there is $57 million then-Archbishop Timothy Dolan took from general funds and buried in the budget for cemeteries. A Catholic federal judge with relatives buried in those Milwaukee cemeteries ruled the $57 million “untouchable” and cannot be used to pay victims because the US Constitution guarantees freedom of religion. His ruling is on appeal.

“I prefer a Church which is bruised, hurting and dirty because it has been out on the streets, rather than a Church which is unhealthy from being confined and from clinging to its own security,” Pope Francis stated in “The Joy of the Gospel.”

Dolan left Milwaukee to become archbishop of New York, and a cardinal under Benedict. In the run-up to the March conclave, the Italian press gushed over Dolan’s glad-handing and kissing babies, suggesting that he’d be a grand pope. Imagine what the international media would have made of that $57 million stuffed in cemetery coffers, had Dolan become pope, or the $20,000 bonus package he gave Milwaukee pedophiles to leave the priesthood. Dolan wisely tamped down the speculation.

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OPD to investigate suspended priest

KENTUCKY
Messenger-Inquirer

Posted: Wednesday, January 1, 2014

By James Mayse Messenger-Inquirer

The Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office has asked the Owensboro Police Department to investigate allegations against a priest who was recently suspended by the Catholic Diocese of Owensboro following accusations of “inappropriate conduct with a minor.”

The diocese informed Blessed Mother Catholic Church parishioners Monday that the Rev. John Meredith has been temporarily suspended following an investigation by the Diocesan Review Board.

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Paedophile Catholic priest Michael Glennon dies of natural causes in Victorian prison

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC

One of Australia’s most notorious paedophile Catholic priests has died in a Victorian prison.

Corrections Victoria has confirmed Michael Glennon died of what is believed were natural causes at the Hopkins Correctional Centre at Ararat, west of Melbourne.

Glennon was serving a 10-year minimum sentence for child sexual offences committed between 1973 and 1991.

Most of his victims were children who were in his care at a camp near Lancefield, north of Melbourne, in the 1980s.

Glennon was due to complete his sentence in 2016.

Dr Bernard Barrett from Broken Rites says Glennon’s case was a turning point for the prosecution of paedophile priests.

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Pedophile priest Michael Glennon dies

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Notorious pedophile Catholic priest Michael Charles Glennon has died in prison.

Corrections Victoria spokesman Mario Xuereb confirmed on Wednesday that Glennon, 69, died overnight of natural causes at the Hopkins Correctional Centre in Ararat.

Glennon was serving a 14-and-a-half year sentence with a 10-year minimum for child sex offences.
In 2003, a court heard that he faced 30 charges for molestation against four victims between 1983 and 1991.

Most of the offences were committed at youth camps held at Karaglen, a rural property at Lancefield, north of Melbourne, which Glennon helped operate.

The former priest was convicted of sexually abusing 15 children between 1974 and 1991, mostly at Karaglen.

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Convicted paedophile priest Michael Glennon dies in jail

AUSTRALIA
The Age

January 1, 2014

Goya Dmytryshchak

One of Australia’s most notorious paedophile priests has died in a Victorian prison.

Michael Glennon, 69, is believed to have died of natural causes in an Ararat jail, where he was serving a minimum 10 and a half year sentence for child sex offences.

Corrections Victoria spokesman Mario Xuereb confirmed that a 69-year-old man died overnight at Hopkins Correctional Centre in Ararat, 200 kilometres west of Melbourne.

In 2003 Glennon was sentenced to at least 15 years’ jail, reduced on appeal, for 23 child sex charges against three victims. It was the fifth time since 1978 that the Catholic priest had been convicted for

Dr Bernard Barrett, a researcher for the Broken Rites victim support group, said the Glennon case was of Australia-wide significance.

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Pedophile priest Michael Charles Glennon dies in jail

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

MARK BUTTLER HERALD SUN JANUARY 01, 2014

NOTORIOUS paedophile Catholic priest Michael Charles Glennon has died in jail.

Glennon, who was convicted of sex charges against children as young as seven, died today in the Hopkins Correctional Centre in Ararat.

By 2003 he had been convicted of abusing 15 children, but police believe there were many more victims.

He first went to jail in 1978, for molesting a 10-year-old girl in his car.

It was the only time he admitted guilt, forcing his many victims to endure long and traumatic criminal trials.

Glennon was still a priest after his release from jail for that crime, practising in a freelance capacity mainly to immigrant and Aboriginal communities.

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Church ordered to release names of priests accused of abuse

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Fox 2

[with video]

ST. LOUIS, MO (KTVI) – A judge has ordered St. Louis catholic officials to turn over the names of all priests accused of sexual abuse over a 20-year span to a victim and her attorney.

Members of SNAP and other victims’ support groups hailed Tuesday’s ruling as they demonstrated in front of the Cathedral Basilica.

St. Louis Circuit Judge Robert Dierker gave the St. Louis Archdiocese until Friday to release the names, which will be kept from the public. Father Joseph Ross is accused of sexually abusing the girl at St. Cronin’s parish.

David Clohessy, director of SNAP, stated, “We are so grateful and proud of this brave young woman who is not only seeking justice for herself and warning people about a proven predator, but she’s also forcing this Archdiocese to ever so slowly to begin to peel back the layers upon layers of secrecy that have for so long protected predators and endangered kids.”

The Archdiocese released a response saying:

“The Archdiocese of St. Louis will review with its attorneys today’s court order for the release of identities of victims and accused clergy dating back many years that involve any substantiated allegation of sexual abuse.”

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List of accused priests from the Diocese of Duluth

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

The list of 17 credibly accused priests includes:

Kirby Blanchard

Date of birth: Nov. 16, 1928
Date of ordination: May 30, 1953
Prior assignments in diocese:
Assistant pastor: Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary, Duluth (July 22, 1953-Jan. 7, 1965)
Pastor: Our Lady of Fatima Church, Garrison (Jan. 7, 1965-Aug. 24, 1966); St. Joseph’s Church, Deerwood (Jan. 7, 1965-Aug. 24, 1966); St. Augustine’s Church, Cohasset (Aug. 24, 1966-Feb. 27, 1969); St. Mary’s Church, Deer River (Aug. 24, 1966-Feb. 27, 1969); St. Christopher Church, Nisswa (Feb. 27, 1969-March 17, 1971); St. Alice Church, Pequot Lakes (Feb. 27, 1969-March 17, 1971); Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Pine River (Feb. 27, 1969-March 17, 1971); St. Anthony’s Church, Duluth (March 17, 1971-June 1, 1976)
Chaplain: St. Joseph’s Hospital, Brainerd (Sept. 1, 1976-Dec. 5, 1993)
Retired: Dec. 5, 1993
Diocese or religious order: Diocesan priest
Date removed from ministry: Dec. 27, 1995
Died: Aug. 11, 2006

Louis Brouillard, 92

Date of birth: July 27, 1921
Date of ordination: Dec. 17, 1948
Prior assignments in diocese:
Temporary administrator: St. Joseph, Beroun (July 27, 1981-July 11, 1984)
Pastor: St. Mary, Keewatin (July 11, 1984-Nov. 12, 1985); St. Anne, Kelly Lake (July 11, 1984-Nov. 12, 1985)
Diocese or religious order: Priest of the Diocese of Agana, Guam
Removed from ministry: Nov. 12, 1985
Current location: Pine City
Current status: Not in ministry, faculties revoked

Victor Chateauvert

Date of birth: May 25, 1919
Date of ordination: Aug. 25, 1973
Prior assignments in diocese:
Pastor: Holy Family, Hillman (June 1, 1982-Dec. 28, 1992)
Diocese or religious order: Priest of the Holy Family Missionaries
Removed from ministry: Dec. 28, 1992 (returned to order)
Died: March 3, 1999

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Duluth Diocese releases list of accused priests

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

List of accused priests from the Diocese of Duluth

By: Tom Olsen, Duluth News Tribune

Duluth Bishop Paul Sirba told members of the media Tuesday that the history of sex abuse cases in the Catholic Church is a “sad truth that must be acknowledged,” and that the church wants to help victims heal and encourage others to come forward with their stories.

That’s why the Diocese of Duluth on Tuesday released a list of 17 priests it has determined to be “credibly accused” of wrongdoing, Sirba said.

“We’re committed to doing what we can to support children,” the bishop said at a news conference at the diocese’s headquarters. “We want to support the healing among victims, and this is an important step.”

Sirba said the release was due, at least in part, to pressure from victims and advocates who have long sought full disclosure from the church in sex abuse cases.

Of the 17 priests, only three are still alive, according to the diocese. Sirba said the list is complete to the best of his knowledge, and promised that the diocese would, in the future, reveal any additional priests who are credibly accused.

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A Prediction for 2014…

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

A Prediction for 2014: Increasing Attempts to Undercut Pope Francis’s Socioeconomic Teaching by Dividing His Supporters Over Gay and Women’s Issues

The mainstream media love to play the centrist (which is to say, right-wing-in-disguise) game of pretending that Catholic teaching about doctrinal or moral issues cannot be revised and never has been changed. History notwithstanding: history and all it demonstrates to us about how, in fact, Catholic teaching has been changed in the past, and repeatedly so, notwithstanding . . . .

And so a constant theme in the mainstream media since Pope Francis came on the scene has been the theme, “He can’t possibly change Catholic teaching about xyz (usually, this conversation is about homosexuality, women’s ordination, sexual ethics including contraception, and abortion). He’s a loyal son of the church.”

I like how James Carroll pulls the rug out from under that mainstream media meme (which, I’ll repeat, serves right-wing interests) in his recent New Yorker reflection on “a radical pope’s first year”:

Francis describes himself as a loyal “son of the Church,” and has a record as a doctrinal conservative. Many observers insist that in a Church understood as semper idem—always the same—the most that even an apparently innovative figure like Francis can effect is “pastoral” adjustments in discipline or practice: a merciful easing up on rules without repealing them. Even if he wanted to, Pope Francis could not alter the basic beliefs of the Church.

But in fact the Church has made profound doctrinal changes in living memory. In 1964, the council repudiated a millennium-long tradition of “No Salvation Outside the Church.” That formulation dates at least to the Fourth Lateran Council, in 1215, and was reiterated by councils and Popes through my youth. Vatican II overturned the doctrine by affirming the primacy of conscience—a teaching Francis has reiterated, applying it to atheists as well.

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Broken Rites knows more victims of Fr Michael Glennon

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (article updated 1 January 2014)

Notorious Australian paedophile priest Michael Charles Glennon has died in jail after Broken Rites referred more Glennon victims to the police.

For twenty years, Broken Rites has been researching Glennon’s life of crime. We have also interviewed some of his victims, who helped to bring him to justice in his various court appearances.

In recent years, more Glennon victims have contacted Broken Rites and in 2013 we arranged for these to have a chat with detectives in the Sano Taskforce in the Victoria Police sex-crimes squad.

Originally, when the Catholic Church ordained Father Michael Glennon as a priest for the Melbourne Archdiocese, it gave him easy access to children.

By the year 2003, Fr Michael Glennon had been convicted five times (and was serving a long jail sentence) for child-sex offences, involving a long list of children, mostly boys. However, these were not his only victims — they were merely those who eventually spoke to the police. The world will never know exactly how many children Father Glennon abused. Even Glennon himself would have lost count of the real number.

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Duluth Diocese: List of Credibly Accused Priests

MINNESOTA
WDIO

[with video]

The Duluth Diocese has released a list of names of priests who they say have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor.

The men worked all over the Northland, and the years for the allegations spanned from 1950 to the present. Most of the clergymen are deceased.

The list has been in the works for several weeks. The goal of releasing it, according to Bishop Paul Sirba, is to encourage hope and healing for victims.

Sirba said most of the information came from the 2004 John Jay study, which was commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Bishops, to look at the causes and context of abuse.

Sirba did acknowledge that a recently filed lawsuit asking the diocese to release the names did play a role.

Anyone who believes they have more information about these priests is encouraged to call the Diocese and law enforcement.

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Amarillo Bishop says hiring of pedophile priest ‘a serious mistake’

TEXAS
Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

By Jim McBride
AMARILLO GLOBE-NEWS

A former Tulia priest has been sentenced to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to molesting a young male parishioner who attended the Church of the Holy Spirit.

John Salazar, 58, pleaded guilty Monday in a Tulia court to a second-degree felony charge of indecency with a child — sexual contact. Judge Robert W. Kincaid ordered him to pay a $1,500 fine and $734 in court costs, court records show.

The case stemmed from an incident that occurred Dec. 23, 2001.

In Los Angeles, Salazar pleaded guilty in 1987 to one count of oral copulation and one count of lewd or lascivious acts with a child for molesting two altar boys, ages 13 and 14. Salazar, who was required to register as a sex offender and was banned from serving as a priest in the Diocese of Los Angeles, served three years of a six-year prison term before being sent in 1990 to a New Mexico treatment program for pedophile priests.

The Amarillo Diocese hired Salazar in 1991 and assigned him — while he was still on parole — to the Church of the Holy Spirit in Tulia, but diocesan officials said later they had received no complaints during his service with the tiny parish.

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Judge orders St. Louis Archdiocese to turn in 20 years of sexual abuse allegations

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KMOV

[with video]

by Matt Sczesny / News 4 | @KMOVMatt
KMOV.com

Posted on December 31, 2013

(KMOV) – A judge has ordered the Archdiocese of St Louis to turn over records of priests accused of sexual abuse from 1983 to 2003.

The order from Judge Robert Dierker sets a deadline of 5 p.m. Friday for the Archdiocese to release the records to attorney Ken Chackes.

Chackes represents a woman who is suing the Archdiocese over allegations she was abused by a priest and he told News 4, the 230 reports will show the Archdiocese repeatedly kept abusive priests.

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The top 10 religion stories from 2013

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

A. James Rudin Religion News Service | Dec. 30, 2013

COMMENTARY Here are my picks for the top 10 religion stories of 2013:

1. A pair of popes: Pope Benedict XVI’s surprise resignation and the election of the Argentina-born Pope Francis (hello, Third World!) was easily the biggest story of the year. The new pope’s modest personal style and his extraordinary commitment to social and economic justice has upset some conservatives and given hope to progressives within the Catholic Church.

2. Sunni-Shiite schism: The brutal Syrian civil war and the overthrow of Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi shattered hopes for a “kinder, gentler” Islamic world. The ballyhooed Arab Spring spilled over into a series of bitter internal and external conflicts with Sunni-led Saudi Arabia and Shiite-led Iran as major adversaries.

3. Falls from grace: The once glowing reputations of retired Los Angeles Cardinal Roger Mahony and Yeshiva University President Rabbi Norman Lamm are no more as both were accused of inadequately responding to the clergy sexual abuse scandal, with consequences including Mahony being stripped of public duties (but not his vote in the papal conclave) and Yeshiva facing a $380 million lawsuit. The sordid revelations and the cover-ups and indifference of many religious leaders have devastated the lives of the victims and damaged the integrity of religious institutions.

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TheMediaReport.com’s Top Posts of 2013

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

As we now approach our tenth year, we would like to thank everyone for making 2013 the best year ever for TheMediaReport.com! Our readership continues to grow dramatically, thanks to you. 2013 was even better than the last, and we look forward to an even better 2014!

There were a lot of important stories in the past year. Between Church-suing lawyer Jeff Anderson’s silly “stuntsuit” against the Vatican finally being dropped and Cardinal Timothy Dolan being vindicated against bogus charges of “shielding” money from abuse victims, it was an eventful 12 months. So we figured we would close out the year with a look at our most compelling posts of 2013.

#5 ‘We’ll Say You Touched Us’: Robbers Attempt to Extort Priest With Threat of Abuse Claim
It is open season on Catholic priests today. Any accusation, threat, or mere hint of abuse from 50 years ago is enough to destroy a priest’s reputation and vault him out of the priesthood forever.

No story more exemplified this than a shocking story out of Chicago, where two men walked into a sacristy and demanded cash from an elderly priest. They accompanied their demand for money with an ominous threat:

“We’ll say you touched us, read the paper, they’ll believe us.”

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