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.

June 25, 2014

Towards Healing did not have Vatican approval, child abuse inquiry told

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Australian Associated Press
theguardian.com, Wednesday 25 June 2014

Towards Healing, the process the Australian Catholic church used to deal with allegations of child sexual abuse, did not have Vatican approval, a royal commission has heard.

Archbishop Philip Wilson told the commission on Wednesday how a formal decree he made when he was bishop of Wollongong to stop a priest about whom there had been complaints, was nullified by a powerful Vatican body.

The archbishop is in the box for the second day explaining how he dealt with John Nestor, a priest who was defrocked by Pope Benedict in 2008.

Complaints about Nestor dated back to 1991.

In 1996 he was found guilty of indecent assault of a teenage altar boy but was acquitted on appeal in 1997.

The archbishop said he used the Towards Healing protocol – the internal process set up by the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference – to have Nestor assessed after he was acquitted.

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.

June 24, 2014

‘RAPE & BUGGER’ HYPOCRISY…

SINGAPORE
Malaysia Chronicle

‘RAPE & BUGGER’ HYPOCRISY: Catholic priest molested me when I was 15 – activist

SINGAPORE – Social activist Vincent Wijeysingha has accused a Catholic priest of trying to molest him when he was a teenager, in a strongly-worded Facebook post on Monday night that attacked the Catholic Church and its stand on homosexuality.

Here is the statement he published on Facebook on June 23:

I see no grounds in Archbishop William Goh’s pronouncement on homosexuality for anything but contempt. Throughout its existence in Singapore, the church has raised its voice in support of little that Christianity has to offer the moral universe. Yet when it does, when one would expect it to affirm its teachings at Matthew 26:27 and in the first Letter to the Corinthians at Verse 13:13, it chooses one within a domain where it has no rights, given its own hideous record.

The universal church is guilty of the systematic rape and abuse of children committed to the care of a clergy ostensibly vowed to celibacy. The response of the magisterium to the thousands of adults now asking it to repair the untold damage done to them in their childhood was first to threaten and coerce into silence and, when that failed, spend billions – yes, billions – of dollars in out of court settlements. Meanwhile, it shielded paedophile clerics from the intervention of the law. In some cases involving senior prelates, it appointed them to sinecures in the Vatican, putting them outside the ambit of local police authorities.

Contrary to what has been put about that this is an isolated phenomenon limited to the United States and Ireland, this is a global phenomenon. While not as extensive as other dioceses, the local church in Singapore is not exempt. Some years ago, it was embroiled in a scandal involving a historical allegation of sexual abuse by a priest. The accused was transferred to another church where his access to children was unimpeded.

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.

Late pedophile priest Maurice Grammond spurs yet another lawsuit, this time for $8.1 million

OREGON
Oregonian

By Aimee Green | agreen@oregonian.com
on June 24, 2014

A man in his mid-50s who says he was abused as a boy by Oregon’s most prolific pedophile priest — Maurice Grammond — filed an $8.1 million lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Portland in federal court Tuesday.

The man, who now lives in California, says that when he was age 6 to 9 he was raped at his home and at the rectory at Our Lady of Victory by Grammond. He estimates he was sexually assaulted 10 to 20 times from 1969 to 1972.

Grammond grew close to the boy and his three brothers after their mother died, said Portland attorney Kristian Roggendorf, who filed the suit in U.S. District Court in Portland.

Roggendorf said this latest victim to come forward brings the number of Grammond’s victims to about three dozen.

Roggendorf’s client is identified in the suit under the pseudonym Martin Voe. Roggendorf said that as early as the mid-1950s, the archdiocese had received a credible report about Grammond molesting a child.

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

Catholic priest accused of attempted molest 30 years ago

SINGAPORE
The Star

SINGAPORE: A Social activist has accused a Catholic priest of trying to molest him when he was a teenager, in a strongly-worded Facebook post on Monday night that attacked the Catholic Church and its stand on homosexuality.

Dr Vincent Wijeysingha’s post was in response to Arcbishop William Goh’s recent statement that restated the Catholic Church’s view of the family unit and that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) relations is “not in accordance with the plan of God”.

It comes amid support by various groups of a Wear White campaign organised by a Muslim religious teacher to protest against homosexuality during this Saturday’s Pink Dot event.

Dr Wijeysingha, 44, a former Singapore Democratic Party member, was Singapore’s first openly gay politician. He quit the party last August to focus on LGBT rights and other civil liberties.

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 dismisses Father Kelleher case in Charlotte

NORTH CAROLINA
Stanly News and Press

By Tiffany Thompson for the SNAP
CNHI

Tuesday, June 24, 2014 — A civil lawsuit that was pending against Father Michael Joseph Kelleher in Mecklenburg County Superior Court has been dismissed after a trial judge ruled that the case exceeded the statute of limitations. Two unnamed men, who reported that Kelleher sexually abused them while they were in their teens, filed the lawsuit Sept. 28, 2011.

The lawsuit stated that “since at least the mid-1970s, [the Charlotte Diocese] has known or should have known that Father Joseph Kelleher was abusing minors and also that he was spending long periods of time alone with them in the rectory, at other locations and on overnight trips both within and outside the territory of the defendant diocese.”

According to the court’s recent ruling, however, the two men waited too long to report their claims of sexual abuse and therefore exceeded the statute of limitations.

Seth Langson, a Charlotte attorney who represented the two men, confirmed that he has 30 days in which to file an appeal to the judge’s decision.

“It is critical to remember that this ruling did not have anything to do with whether the Diocese had covered up and concealed sexual abuse by priests or whether Father Kelleher and/or Father Richard Farwell had abused our clients,” Langson said in his “A Voice for Victims of Sexual Abuse” blog.

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.

Predator priest on the run in Southern California

CALIFORNIA
Fox 5

by Salvador Rivera
Reporter

SAN DIEGO — Priest Jeffrey Newell has been suspended by the Catholic Church for sexually abusing children in Tijuana. This is the second time Newell has been sanctioned for his actions.

Years ago, Newell was involved in the Los Angeles sexual abuse scandal. His victims were promised he’d never be allowed near children ever again. It turns out he had been working in a Tijuana church since 2010.

After a number of allegations, a team of Vatican investigators arrived in Tijuana to look into complaints against Newell and 17 other priests. Seven of them, including Newell, were relieved of their duties.

With disciplinary action pending, Newell fled Tijuana and is reportedly back in California, possibly San Diego.

Richard Sipe, who has researched priest abuse for decades, says the Catholic Church continues to shuffle predator priests, only now, exporting the problem to Latin American countries such as Mexico.

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

Court Dismissed Sex Abuse Cases Against Charlotte Docese Because of the Statute of Limitations

NORTH CAROLINA
Seth H. Langston

Posted on June 23, 2014

Diocese Sex Abuse Cases

Today the trial judge ruled that our clients had waited too long to bring their claims for sex abuse against the Diocese. It is critical to remember that this ruling did not have anything to do with whether the Diocese had covered up and concealed sexual abuse by priests or whether Father Kelleher and/or Father Richard Farwell had abused our clients.

We were looking forward to presenting our case to the jury and introducing all of the evidence about how the Charlotte Diocese has acted no differently than many other dioceses across the country in dealing with such allegations.

Despite the Judge’s ruling, I encourage anyone who was sexually abused by a priest of the Charlotte Diocese to come forward.

This case also should motivate people to demand that our legislatures extend or abolish the civil statute of limitations for sex abuse.

Please pray for the brave survivors who came forward.

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.

Sexual abuse victim sues Archdiocese of Portland for $8.1 M

OREGON
KOIN

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN 6) – A man who says he was repeatedly raped as a child by a priest in Seaside, Ore. is suing the Archdiocese of Portland for $8.1 million.

The man, identified in the complaint under the pseudonym “Martin Voe,” said between 1969 and 1972 – when he was between the ages of six and nine – Archdiocese of Portland priest Father Maurice Grammond abused him between ten and 20 times.

This, while the Archdiocese knew of previous abuse cases committed by Grammond in the 1950s, said Voe’s lawyer, Kristian Roggendorf.

“The Archdiocese knew that Fr. Grammond had been credibly accused of abusing boys as early as the mid-1950s, and the Archbishop had even been contacted by a judge of the Clatsop County Court the year before my client’s abuse started,” said Roggendorf.

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.

Sexual Assault Victim Not “Privileged Status” at Bob Jones University

SOUTH CAROLINA
Nonprofit Quarterly

WRITTEN BY RICK COHEN CREATED ON TUESDAY, 24 JUNE 2014

Amid the national controversy around columnist George Will’s view that women who have been sexually assaulted on college campuses occupy “a coveted status that confers privileges,” there is a specific story of one university with an apparently reprehensible policy regarding the treatment of victims of rape.

Bob Jones University in South Carolina lost its nonprofit tax status in a 1983 Supreme Court decision in which the Court decided that the university’s virulent racist policies were incompatible with compelling government public policy and could override the school’s belief that the First Amendment protected its racism. Would the IRS have acted similarly had it known of BJU’s treatment of women at the school who report themselves as victims of rape?

Al Jazeera’s impressive America Tonight program has aired a two-part show on BJU’s approach to the issue of sexual assault on campus. It tells of a woman who, after being raped by her supervisor at a summer job, reported the incident to the dean of students. As the young woman recounts the story, here is what the dean said:

“He goes, ‘Well, there’s always a sin under other sin. There’s a root sin,’” she recalled. “And he said, ‘We have to find the sin in your life that caused your rape.’”

The Al Jazeera story covers the allegations of that young woman and others who described at BJU a “culture that heaped on shamed and pushed them to silence…[in which] they were told that their sins had brought on their rapes, that their trauma meant they were fighting God and that healing came from forgiving their rapists.” The details in the story address not only the incidents of sexual abuse, but the trauma (not privilege, Mr. Will!) endured by the victims and the religious counseling offered by the school’s staff, focusing on getting the victims to forgive the rapists and to convince them to remove from their thinking the thoughts that made them unhappy, depressed, in cases, suicidal.

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.

Archbishop accused of abuse is reportedly at liberty in Rome

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

A bishop from the Dominican Republic has reported that he was shocked to see a former papal nuncio, who is under investigation on sex-abuse charges, walking freely around the center of Rome.

Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski, who had been the Vatican’s representative in the Dominican Republic, was recalled to Rome last year. Prosecutors in the Dominican Republic have said that they have convincing evidence that the prelate molested young men there; he has also been accused of abuse in his native Poland.

The Vatican has promised to cooperate with Dominican and Polish prosecutors, and pointed out that as a citizen of the Vatican city-state, Archbishop Wesolowski is also subject to criminal prosecution there. The Vatican has made no further public statement about his case. But when Pope Francis told reporters that three bishops are under investigation, most reporters assumed that Archbishop Wesolowski was included in that number.

However, Bishop Victor Masalles, an auxiliary of the Santo Domingo archdiocese, reported that he saw the Polish bishop during a trip to Rome. “For me it was a surprise to see Wesolowski walking along the Via della Scrofa,” he said.

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

Polish church leaders call for more action to prevent abuse by priests

POLAND
Catholic News Service

By Jonathan Luxmoore
Catholic News Service

WARSAW, Poland (CNS) — Poland’s Catholic Church has held a penitential service for victims of sexual abuse by priests, after calls for more action to curb molestation in the country.

“It was said this was America’s problem, and then a problem of Anglo-Saxon countries, and then a problem for the West — the frontiers were pushed ever further so we could insist it didn’t affect us,” said Bishop Piotr Libera of Plock, a former bishops’ conference secretary-general.

“As bishops, we must admit that, instead of putting the good of children in first place, we too often allowed ourselves to be deceived by the fraud, duplicity and denial mechanisms of perpetrators of the crime of pedophilia.”

“Ashamed and repentant, we ask for forgiveness,” he said in a June 20 Mass in Krakow’s Jesuit basilica. “We ask God and we ask people who were hurt by the priests.”

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.

NCR earns ‘General Excellence’ honor for 13th time in 14 year

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

National Catholic Reporter was named first in “General Excellence” among national Catholic newspapers for the 13th time in 14 years by the Catholic Press Association of the United States and Canada at the 2014 Catholic Media Conference that ran June 18-20 in Charlotte, N.C.

The judges said NCR provides “simply excellent coverage of the Catholic world in the U.S. and abroad. Challenging in some articles but solid in sourcing across articles. American journalistic standards with a strong sense of the newsworthy.”

NCR also garnered 21 other CPA honors, including four first-place awards for news writing and commentary:

Best online blog: “Distinctly Catholic” by Michael Sean Winters
Best news writing on a national event: “Lack of funding ends lay-run forum” by Megan O’Neil
Best news writing on an international event: Mary Jo McConahay’s coverage of the Guatemala genocide trial
Best investigative reporting: “Contradictions cast doubt on Philadelphia verdicts” by Ralph Cipriano

NCR also took the second- and third-place honors for investigative news writing. Second place went to NCR staff writer Brian Roewe for “Excommunicated: A tangled tale leads to Australian priest’s dismissal.” Third place was awarded jointly to Jason Berry, Joshua J. McElwee and Tom Gallagher for “Anatomy of a cover-up,” “The widow: Deposition shows dedication to order,” and “The banker: insulator and facilitator.”

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.

Sexual abuse survivor, attorneys will request release…

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Sexual abuse survivor, attorneys will request release of electronically stored information from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Ramsey County Hearing Moved to 9:00 AM Wednesday, June 25, 2014

(St. Paul, MN) – On Wednesday June 25, 2014, at 9:00 AM in Ramsey County District Court, Judge John Van de North may decide whether the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona will be required to turn over electronically stored information in the Doe 1 civil lawsuit filed in May 2013.

Doe 1, along with his attorneys are also seeking additional deposition time with Archbishop John Nienstedt and former Vicar General Father Kevin McDonough and records from the Priest Personnel Board.

Please note the time change made by the Court. The hearing will begin at 9:00AM CDT tomorrow in Ramsey County District Court.

• The original Doe 1 complaint and additional information can be found on our website at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact Jeff Anderson: Office/651.927.7872 Cell/612.817.8665
Contact Mike Finnegan: Office/651.927.7872 Cell/612.205.5531

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 allowed to be around kids after complaints

MINNESOTA
WXOW

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – A priest accused of molesting boys says leaders in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis allowed him to remain around kids for decades – even though parents complained about his conduct.

Attorneys for a man who claims he was abused by the Rev. Jerome Kern released documents in the case Tuesday, including a sworn deposition in which Kern says he wrestled with kids and horsed around, but didn’t think his actions were inappropriate.

He says no one in church leadership told him he should stop the behavior and he wasn’t restricted from being around kids. Attorneys for victims say church leaders first got a report about Kern in 1969. He was removed from ministry in 2002.

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.

Legionaries of Christ to receive Vatican-appointed adviser

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Francis X. Rocca Catholic News Service | Jun. 24, 2014

VATICAN CITY
The Vatican will name a special “assistant” to advise the leadership of the troubled Legionaries of Christ, whose revised constitutions Pope Francis has still not approved four months after they were submitted to him.

Fr. Eduardo Robles Gil, general director of the Legionaries, made the announcement in a video message sent to the congregation’s members Sunday and now accessible on YouTube.

Cardinal Joao Braz de Aviz and Archbishop Jose Rodriguez Carballo, respectively prefect and secretary of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life, informed Robles Gil of the plan for an adviser at a recent meeting, the general director said.

“We asked if this assistant would have a role in government, but we were told that no, our government was autonomous,” Robles Gil said in the video.

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.

Cabinet approves support package for Magdalene women

IRELAND
Irish Times

Mary Minihan

Tue, Jun 24, 2014

Women who worked in the Magdalene laundries and remain resident in Ireland will get a medical card and other supports following Cabinet approval for draft legislation today.

Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald also confirmed payments which have been made by the State to the women will be exempt from means test criteria for services such as nursing home support.

“Following the apology issued in the Dáil by an Taoiseach to former residents of the Magdalene laundries, the Government committed to implementing all of the recommendations made by Mr Justice [John]Quirke in his report,” she 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.

What the excommunication of Italian mafia members could mean for Francis, his Catholics

ITALY
National Catholic Reporter

Nicholas Collura | Jun. 24, 2014 NCR Today

It is hard to imagine a more perfect contemporary personification of human evil than the Italian mafia Camorra scattering carcinogenic trash throughout Naples or the ‘Ndrangheta, whose high-placed and diversified criminal activities did not put it above assassinating a 3-year-old in January.

This weekend, Pope Francis found a gesture to rival these mafia organizations’ power, declaring them excommunicated. His prophetic action set off a range of speculations.

Some fear the pope has placed himself in danger. Similar worries began circulating last year, when Calabrian state prosecutor Nicola Gratteri warned that “if the godfathers can find a way to stop” the pope from condemning corruption and reforming Vatican finances, “they will seriously consider it.” At that time, mafia expert John Dickie was more skeptical: “Even a rudimentary projection of the likely consequences of a hit on the head of the Catholic Church,” he said, “would show it to be catastrophic” to the mafia itself.

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.

Little Sisters of Poor have not agreed to take in Gerald Robinson

OHIO
Toledo Blade

The Little Sisters of the Poor apparently have not agreed to accept convicted murderer Gerald Robinson as a patient at their Sacred Heart Home in Oregon.

In a court filing today, Rick Kerger, attorney for the dying Catholic priest, amended his petition seeking to have Robinson released from a prison hospital to return to Toledo. He informed the court that the Little Sisters “were not asked to care for, and have not made any commitment to care for” Robinson.

Mr. Kerger wrote that the error in his original petition for equitable relief filed on Friday was his own. He declined to comment Tuesday.

Last week, Mr. Kerger asked a federal court judge to release Robinson to the Little Sisters of the Poor or to Robinson’s brother and sister-in-law in Toledo. Robinson, 76, is in a hospice unit at Franklin Medical Center, a Columbus hospital run by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, after suffering “a massive coronary.”

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.

Alberta Catholic archdiocese hit with four sex assault lawsuits

CANADA
Sun News

TONY BLAIS | QMI AGENCY

EDMONTON – A northern Alberta Catholic archdiocese has been slapped with four separate lawsuits totalling $890,000 relating to alleged historical sexual assaults.

According to the four statements of claim, which were filed June 11, the assaults happened at or near the St. Bernard Catholic Church in Grouard, Alta., in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.

Two of the lawsuits allege sexual assaults by a priest identified as Father Lambert.

One male plaintiff claims Father Lambert sexually assaulted him in the basement of the St. Bernard Mission School on unknown dates between 1952 and 1961.

The alleged victim says he suffered irreparable psychological harm, recurring flashbacks, betrayal and an aversion towards church settings as a result of the alleged forced masturbation, groping and attempted sodomy.

A second male plaintiff claims Father Lambert put his hands down his pants and fondled his penis on an unknown date in 1952 at the Grouard town hall, which was owned and operated by the St. Bernard Catholic Church.

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: Nuns Not Asked to Care for Dying Priest

OHIO
ABC News

TOLEDO, Ohio — Jun 24, 2014
By JOHN SEEWER Associated Press

A nursing home run by nuns has not been asked or agreed to take care of a dying Roman Catholic priest convicted of killing a nun at a hospital chapel in 1980, his attorney said Tuesday.

The attorney for the Rev. Gerald Robinson wrote in a court filing that his statement last week that the Little Sisters of the Poor were willing to care for the priest was in error.

“The Little Sisters of the Poor were not asked to care for, and have not made any commitment to care for Father Robinson,” attorney Richard Kerger said.

Robinson has been in a prison hospice unit in Columbus since the end of May after suffering a heart attack and wants to die in his hometown of Toledo, Kerger said in a motion filed Friday in federal court.

The motion said that the Little Sisters of the Poor, who run a home for the elderly and dying just outside Toledo, indicated a willingness to care for Robinson during his final days. It also said the priest’s brother and sister-in-law were willing to take him in, Kerger 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.

STOP GIVING THEM MONEY !!!

UNITED STATES
Deliverance

I have observed that many people I know are unsympathetic to the never-ending sex scandals within the Catholic Church. “It’s only Catholics doing bad things to Catholics,” I have been told. “Any people dumb enough to subject themselves to such a gross cult-like authoritarian structure deserve anything that happens to them!”

With the case of Father Timothy Backous, however, the Catholic Diocese of Duluth, the St. Scholastica Monastery, and the corporation of ESSENTIA HEALTH have gone outside the confines of the Church. They have involved the public at large, with potential consequences for Protestants, Jews, Eastern Orthodox, Swedenborgians, Buddhists, Atheists, Pagans, whoever.

ESSENTIA HEALTH, corporation-wide, is a public medical entity. They actively solicit and encourage ALL of the public to obtain their services. They engage in a continuous process of advertising and publicity. As a public combination of hospitals and medical centers, and receiving at least partial funding from public monies, ESSENTIA HEALTH is obliged to follow state and federal rules and regulations on a number of issues.

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MN- Archdiocese took no action against predator priest, SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, June 24, 2014

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

In a recently released deposition, a predator priest admits the Twin Cities archdiocese took no action against him after abuse allegations were reported. We are not surprised, but we’re deeply disappointed that Catholic officials were and are so reckless with the safety of children.

[Star Tribune]

Fr. Jerome Kern is one of 30 priests the archdiocese recently admitted has credible abuse allegations against them.

We hope, as more and more of these revelations come to light, that parishioners and parents will be able to better protect their children and demand that church officials act legally, responsibly, and in line with their own codes of conduct.

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 Real Scandal Behind the Tuam Home for Unwed Mothers

IRELAND
Catholic World Report

June 24, 2014

While the media rushed to exaggeration, misinformation, and fabrication, the real societal ills behind the deaths of 800 Irish children were largely overlooked.

Michael Kelly

For a month now, sections of the Irish and international media have been convulsed by reports of shockingly high mortality rates at a state-funded, Church-run mother and baby home in the west of Ireland. It has been difficult to separate fact from fiction and too few commentators have sought to get to the bottom of the story, with many instead choosing to focus on salacious exaggerations, misinformation, and untruths.

Yes, there was a shockingly high infant mortality rate in the Tuam mother and baby home run by the Bon Secours congregation of nuns. Between 1925 and 1961, 976 infants died. Many of the children, it appears, were buried at an unmarked grave, which was lovingly tended by local Catholic families for decades. Now, the tragic deaths of so many youngsters should be devastating enough in itself to warrant further investigation. But some media commentators and seasoned campaigners immediately sought to exaggerate the story in the most appalling fashion. The children were soon forgotten in the dash to hang their deaths as a crime around the neck of Catholic Ireland.

In media reports, the common grave soon became a “mass grave” and then a “septic tank.” The nuns were accused of “dumping” the children in the grave, and there have been suggestions that police should open up a criminal investigation into the deaths despite absolutely no evidence that any of the tragic deaths were in untoward circumstances. The government has promised a Commission of Inquiry to look at the issue. However, some are wary that the terms of reference may be set so narrowly as to include only Catholic-run institutions, leaving out so-called “county homes” where many unmarried mothers lived with their newborn babies. Former residents of a Protestant-run home in Dublin have also complained that their plight has been ignored.

The world’s media soon arrived, inevitably adding more heat than light. A Washington Times headline screamed, “Catholic Church Tossed 800 Irish Orphans into Septic Tank”; Salon’s stated: “An Irish Catholic Orphanage Hid the Bodies of 800 Children.” More fuel was added to the fire by Father Brian D’arcy, a liberal priest and darling of the Irish media, who likened the nuns’ behavior to that of the Nazis during the Holocaust.

So quick has been the rush to judgment that an eminent media outlet has been forced to roll back on earlier versions of the story. The Associated Press has issued a correction to earlier stories which included claims that were demonstrably untrue. In a response issued at the weekend, the AP admitted that

in stories published June 3 and June 8 about young children buried in unmarked graves after dying at a former Irish orphanage for the children of unwed mothers, The Associated Press incorrectly reported that the children had not received Roman Catholic baptisms; documents show that many children at the orphanage were baptized. The AP also incorrectly reported that Catholic teaching at the time was to deny baptism and Christian burial to the children of unwed mothers; although that may have occurred in practice at times it was not Church teaching. In addition, in the June 3 story, the AP quoted a researcher who said she believed that most of the remains of children who died there were interred in a disused septic tank; the researcher has since clarified that without excavation and forensic analysis it is impossible to know how many sets of remains the tank contains, if any. The June 3 story also contained an incorrect reference to the year that the orphanage opened; it was 1925, not 1926.

Despite the misreporting, it’s important to be clear: the Tuam mother and baby home was a terrible place with awful conditions that reflected a society build on petty snobbery; “illegitimate” children and unmarried mothers were treated in a very unchristian fashion by a country that professed to be a bastion of Catholic virtue. It is unlikely that other, similar homes—whether run by the Church, state, or another religious denomination—were any less harsh.

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.

Assignment Record – Rev. John G. O’Flaherty, s.j.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: John G. O’Flaherty was a Jesuit of the Missouri Province ordained in 1942. He served in parishes in St. Louis and Kansas City, and as a hospital chaplain in Monett, MO. He was also assigned at various times to Pueblo and Denver, CO. He died in 1987. O’Flaherty was accused of abuse in a 2011 civil complaint filed in Pueblo, CO.

Ordained: 1942
Died: June 19, 1987

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Happy Valley pastor facing sex-crime charges

OREGON
Oregonian

By Rick Bella | rbella@oregonian.com
on June 23, 2014

The senior pastor of a Happy Valley church is facing sex-crime charges in Multnomah County.

Michael George “Mike” Sperou, 64, of Happy Valley, co-founder of the North Clackamas Bible Community, was arrested by Portland police Thursday. He was booked into the Multnomah County Jail on suspicion of three counts of first-degree unlawful sexual penetration.

Under Oregon law, first-degree unlawful sexual penetration is a Class A felony that falls under Measure 11 and is punishable by a mandatory minimum sentence of eight years, four months in prison.

After he was arraigned in Multnomah County Circuit Court, Sperou posted a $35,000 security deposit against bail of $350,000 and was released Saturday.

Sgt. Pete Simpson, Portland police spokesman, said reports on Sperou’s arrest are not yet available and that hadn’t heard any details in the case.

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Clackamas pastor charged with 3 sex felonies

OREGON
KOIN

[with video]

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN 6) — The pastor of a Clackamas County church is charged with three counts of sex crimes.

Michael Sperou faces three felonies for unlawful sexual penetration. He is listed on the website of BcResources.net as a senior pastor and founding member of the North Clackamas Bible Community.

Michal Mitchell, Sperou’s niece and a member of the church, told KOIN 6 there is no physical church. Instead, members move from home to home. She also said her uncle is innocent.

“I’m convinced. I know him very well. I know that he’s innocent,” said Mitchell. “He’s the most wonderful person that I know, and it’s not just me. A lot of people would say he’s their best friend, and the most wonderful and influential person in their lives.”

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Clackamas County pastor faces sex abuse charges

OREGON
KPTV

By FOX 12 Staff

CLACKAMAS COUNTY, OR (KPTV) –
The pastor of a Clackamas County church pleaded not guilty to several sex abuse charges.

Michael Sperou was arrested June 19 on three charges related to sex abuse. Police did not release any details of those charges.

The website for North Clackamas Bible Community lists Sperou as a senior pastor and founding member.

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Report: Ex-Austin priest admitted to abuse

MINNESOTA
Austin Daily Herald

By Trey Mewes

An Austin priest admitted taking a nude photo of a teenage boy when he served in Austin around 1978 and also admitted to sexually abusing a minor male a few years later, according to information released by the Diocese of Winona.

The diocese released details Monday about 14 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children, calling their decision an effort to be transparent and promote healing.

One of the 14 was Jack Krough, 64, who was ordained in 1975 and began serving at Austin’s St. Augustine Catholic Church and Pacelli Catholic Schools the next year. Krough transferred to Winona in 1980, but not before he allegedly sexually abused a minor male.

In 1993, Krough admitted he took a photo found in his home of a nude 16-year-old back in 1978 when he served in Austin. He was sent to St. Luke’s Institute for an assessment but was returned to the ministry in New Richland and Waldorf, Minn.

Krough admitted to sexually abusing a minor between 1979 and 1981, after someone reported the crime to the diocese in 1997. Krough was removed from ministry at St. Edward’s Catholic Church in Austin and Our Lady of Loretto in Brownsdale and taken to St. Luke’s for treatment. He resigned from the ministry in 2002, after he was confronted in another incident involving inappropriate touching.

As of December, Krough lived in Barron, Wis.

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Mexico archdiocese suspends seven priests for abuse

MEXICO
National Catholic Reporter

David Agren Catholic News Service | Jun. 24, 2014

MEXICO CITY The archdiocese of Tijuana has suspended seven priests — including one sued for abuse in Los Angeles — over allegations of sexual abuse.

The priests are not allowed to practice their ministries, Mexican media reported.

An archdiocesan spokesman confirmed to The Associated Press the American priest was Fr. Jeffrey Newell, who worked previously in the Los Angeles archdiocese.

No other names were released by the archdiocese.

In a June 17 statement, the archdiocese said: “As a church we make a call to those that have been victims of abuse to minors or witnesses to it to file complaints with the competent civil authorities.”

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Recent Depositions

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Updated June 9, 2014

On April 2, 2014, Archbishop John Nienstedt gave his deposition in the case of Doe #1, which is a civil lawsuit against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Diocese of Winona, and Thomas Adamson.

We offer the deposition in its entirety, as part of our renewed commitment to transparency. As you will notice, the Archbishop answered every question asked. The court pre-determined the length of the four hour deposition, and the Archbishop continued to answer questions past the time allotted. There was not a single question asked about Thomas Adamson and the allegations of abuse of Doe #1 in 1976-1977.

You will see a searchable PDF of the deposition below.

You will also see links to the entire video of the deposition (in three chapters) posted below, allowing you to see the questions and answers in context.

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Deposition of Andrew Eisenzimmer

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

On May 8, 2014, Andrew Eisenzimmer, who served the archdiocese as Chancellor for Civil Affairs between 2005 and 2012, was deposed in the Doe 1 case in St. Paul. The case is a civil lawsuit against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, the Diocese of Winona, and Thomas Adamson for allegations of abuse between 1976 and 1977. We offer the deposition as part of our renewed commitment to transparency and disclosure. However, selected portions were redacted—and others that were ordered sealed have been removed—to protect victims.

PDF:
Deposition of Andrew Eisenzimmer

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Priest said church took no action against him for abuse accusations

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: June 24, 2014

Priest is among those identified as credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis took no action against the Rev. Jerome Kern when parents complained that he had sexually abused their sons, Kern said in a court deposition released Tuesday morning.

Kern is among more than 30 priests the archdiocese identified last December as being credibly accused of abusing minors. He has been sued several times, including last November as the scandal over the archdiocese’s handling of abuse claims was escalating.

The plaintiff, a man in his 50s who claims Kern abused him in the 1970s, is represented by the law firm of Jeff Anderson & Associates, which has sued the archdiocese multiple times since a change in state law allowed the filing of suits claiming decades-old abuse.

The St. Paul-based firm released the deposition Tuesday as part of a series of public releases of sworn statements in clergy abuse cases, including testimony by Archbishop John Nienstedt and former Archbishop Harry Flynn.

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Videotape deposìtion of FATHER JEROME KERN

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

[Fr. Jerome Kern file]
[Timeline]
[key documents]
[deposition]
[video]

DOE 26
Plaintiff,
Defendants

Videotape deposìtion of FATHER JEROME KERN, taken putsuant to Notice of Taking Deposition, and taken before Gary W. Hermes, a Notary PubIic in and for the county of Ramsey, State of Minnesota, on the 15th day of Àpril, 20I4, at 445 Minnesota street, St. Paul, Minnesota, commencing at approximately 9:31 o’clock a.m.

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Twin Cities priest didn’t see sex with teen as abuse, he testifies

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Richard Chin
rchin@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 06/24/2014

[with video]

Jerome Kern, a Twin Cities priest accused in a 2013 lawsuit of sexually abusing a teenage boy in the 1970s, said he didn’t feel he was doing anything wrong when he had physical contact with children in the past, according to a deposition transcript released Tuesday.

“I never saw anything myself in terms of sexual abuse,” testified Kern, who worked in St. Paul and Forest Lake parishes and is accused by a man indentified as Doe 26 who says Kern “engaged in unpermitted sexual contact” with him in the 1970s when Kern was serving as a priest at Our Lady of Grace in Edina.

Over the decades, at least 20 individuals have alleged that Kern abused them when they were children, according to St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson, who is representing Doe 26 in the lawsuit against Kern and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. Anderson’s office released a transcript Tuesday of a deposition Kern gave on April 15.

In his deposition, Kern, a priest since 1966, said his conduct with children was never reported to police as far as he knows, nobody from the archdiocese told him what he was doing was a crime or warned him he could go to jail for touching children, and he was never concerned that he would be arrested for his behavior with children.

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Human Trafficking A ‘Hidden Crisis’ In West Michigan

MICHIGAN
Fox 17

[with video]

by Nicole DiDonato
Reporter

WEST MICHIGAN (June 23, 2014) — It’s a hidden crisis in West Michigan. Experts who work with victims of sexual crimes say thousands of minors are sold into human trafficking right in our own communities.

If you think human trafficking only happens in third world countries, think again.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation estimates 300,000 minors are at risk of being sold every year in the U.S. And it’s happening even closer to home.

“Unfortunately the state department estimates in West Michigan alone, there are 2,400 minors for sale at any given time, mostly on the internet. And this is in the land of the free, ” said Rebecca McDonald, founder and president of Women At Risk International. …

WAR gets up to 20 tips a month and turns them over to law enforcement.

Just recently, police arrested WCSG radio personality, John Balyo, and charged him with first degree criminal sexual conduct. McDonald believes this is a wake-up call.

“Law enforcement is there to be the judgement,” says McDonald.

“Our job is to be compassionate and to reach out to the victims of this man who have years of recovery and to even his family members who are victims in this situation.”

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Radio Host Charged with Sex Crime Booted from Traffic Squad

MICHIGAN
Fox 17

by Paul Cicchini
Reporter

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (June 24, 2014) – A former radio host who is now facing criminal sex charges has been removed as a volunteer with the Kent County Sheriff’s Department.

John Balyo had helped the traffic squad since 2004.

The group, which is a 501(c)(3), assisted with community parades and other events.

Balyo was arrested Friday in Gaylord at the Big Ticket Festival.

Monday, he was charged with two counts of criminal sexual conduct involving a child.

According to a police report, Balyo had sexual contact with a 12-year-old boy.

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Prosecutor: Balyo admitted to sexually assaulting boy

MICHIGAN
WOOD TV

By Steve Kelso and 24 Hour News 8 web staff

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (WOOD) — A longtime Christian radio host allegedly admitting to sexual assaulting at least one 12-year-old boy.

John Balyo was arraigned Monday in a Battle Creek courtroom on one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. It’s a felony charge that could land him in jail for the rest of his life.

Balyo shook his head as the charge against him was read.

He was arrested as the result of a federal investigation into Ronald Moser of Battle Creek. Police say Balyo paid Moser to arrange sexual liaisons with young boys for sex and that one of the encounters — involving a 12-year-old — happened in Battle Creek in May.

Calhoun County Prosecutor David Gilbert told Magistrate David Heiss Monday that Balyo confessed to police.

“It is my understanding based on the police report that the defendant did make admissions to count one,” Gilbert said.

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Prosecutor: Christian radio host admitted to raping boy

MICHIGAN
WZZM

[with video]

Christa E Graban, WZZM June 23, 2014

BATTLE CREEK, Mich. (Battle Creek Enquirer) — A former Grand Rapids-area Christian radio host admitted to having sex with a 12-year-old boy, the Calhoun County prosecutor said Monday.

John Balyo, 35, of Caledonia, was ordered Monday to be held without bond after Prosecutor David Gilbert said Balyo made incriminating statements to investigators.

“The defendant did make admissions to count one of the complaint,” Gilbert told Calhoun County District Court Magistrate David Heiss during Balyo’s arraignment.

Balyo is charged with one count of first-degree criminal sexual conduct — a penetration offense — and one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct — a touching offense. Battle Creek police have alleged he had a sexual encounter with a 12-year-old boy in Battle Creek on May 17.

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John Balyo fired from sheriff’s reserve after sex charges

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Agar | jagar@mlive.com
on June 23, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – John Balyo, the former Christian radio host accused of sexual assault, was fired as a Kent County sheriff’s reserve on Friday, June 20, when the allegations came to light.

Balyo served in the Enforcement Unit of Kent County Sheriff’s Department’s Traffic Squad.

The all-volunteer group provides assistance to Kent County Sheriff’s Department and other police agencies in the county at special events.

Undersheriff Jon Hess said the director of the Traffic Squad terminated Balyo on Friday. Balyo had volunteered as a reserve since 2004.

Hess reported no problems with Balyo’s work.

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Rome- Bishop criticizes Vatican over accused abusive archbishop

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, June 24, 2014

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

In a rare “split in the ranks,” a bishop says that Vatican officials have “injured the people of God” by their “silence” over former Vatican envoy Archbishop Józef Wesolowski, who is accused of sexually abusing boys in Dominican Republic.

[Dominican Today]

Santo Domingo Archdiocese Auxiliary Bishop Víctor Masalles admitted yesterday that he saw Wesolowski walking free in Rome. Vatican staff are refusing to extradite Wesolowski to Poland where law enforcement authorities want to question him for his alleged child sex crimes.

In our view, it’s incredibly irresponsible for Catholic officials to thwart a police investigation. But it’s also incredibly irresponsible for them to let a credibly accused child molesting cleric live in the figurative and literal center of Catholicism evidently with no supervision.

Consider these three simple facts. It takes seconds to molest a child. Millions of tourists and their families visit Rome annually. Most of them respect and trust clerics. Only a tiny handful of them know who Wesolowski is. He likely still dresses as an archbishop.

That combination is a child molesting cleric’s dream. Knowing that he faces potential criminal prosecution and imprisonment, this looks like a recipe for re-offense.

If not for self-serving Vatican intervention, Wesolowski would likely be behind bars now. The least Vatican officials can do is to put him in a remote, secure, independently-run treatment center where he’ll be kept away from kids. Anything less dramatically increases the chances that Wesolowski will assault another innocent child.

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Cleric convinced abusers to resign

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JUNE 25, 2014

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

ONE of Australia’s most powerful Catholic officials has defended his practice of holding private, ­unrecorded conversations with priests accused of child-sex abuse in which he quietly convinced them to resign.

Giving evidence yesterday to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Brian Lucas said the interviews, during which he kept no note of what was said, were “about the protection of children”.

It is the second public ­inquiry to interrogate Father Lucas, general secretary of the Australian National Catholic Bishops Conference, over the interviews.

In September, the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry heard he conducted interviews with about 35 allegedly abusive priests during the 1990s, convincing those who confessed their crimes to quietly resign their posts.

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Father Brian Lucas protected accused paedophiles, sex abuse royal commission hears

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

BEN PIKE THE DAILY TELEGRAPH JUNE 25, 2014

ONE of the Catholic Church’s most senior priests did not take notes after confronting accused pedophiles in the clergy because he did not want to “betray” them.

Father Brian Lucas has already come under fire from former premier Barry O’Farrell who, in parliament, called for him to be sacked because he did not report pedophile priests to the police.

Yesterday he told the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that taking notes during meetings with accused priests would have prevented them from speaking “frankly and openly”.

“I don’t think that’s fair to a person. If you’ve said to him ‘we’re having a frank conversation, this is confidential’, I’m not going to take a note of it,’’ the trained lawyer said.

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Arrestato il capo della Caritas “Sesso in cambio dello status”

ITALIA
Live Sicilia

TRAPANI – Il presidente della Caritas di Trapani, don Sergio Librizzi è stato arrestato dalla sezione pg della forestale presso la procura con l’accusa di concussione e reati sessuali.

Secondo l’accusa, don Librizzi avrebbe chiesto prestazioni sessuali a migranti maschi che chiedevano lo status di rifugiati politici. Il sacerdote era componente – “molto influente”, ha sottolineato il pm Paolo Di Sciuva in una conferenza stampa a Trapani – della commissione territoriale presso la Prefettura, deputata al rilascio dello status. “Costringeva i giovani a prestazioni sessuali – ha detto il procuratore capo Marcello Viola – mediante pressioni, facendo leva sul suo ruolo apicale, sulla sua posizione di dominio”.

L’indagine, non ancora conclusa, per ora coinvolge soltanto don Librizzi. Fondamentali sono state le intercettazioni ambientali. Tra le vittime, almeno otto, non ci sono soltanto migranti, ma anche disagiati che si erano rivolti alla Caritas. Le accuse riguardano episodi che vanno dal 2009 ai giorni scorsi. In particolare gli episodi riscontrati sarebbero concentrati negli ultimi sei mesi. Le prestazioni sessuali sarebbero avvenute nell’auto del sacerdote, sulla quale gli investigatori avevano collocato le “cimici”. Il sacerdote è stato portato in carcere. “Abbiamo chiesto ed ottenuto la custodia cautelare in carcere – ha detto il procuratore Viola – perché c’è il rischio di inquinamento delle prove, ma anche della reiterazione del reato”.

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Don Sergio Librizzi arrestato. Il presidente della Caritas di Trapani è accusato di concussione e reati sessuali

ITALIA
L’Huffington Post

Il presidente della Caritas di Trapani, don Sergio Librizzi, è stato arrestato dalla sezione della forestale presso la procura con l’accusa di concussione e reati sessuali. Il prete è stato fermato nella canonica della chiesa di San Pietro, di cui è parroco. Non si conoscono ancora dettagli sulla vicenda in cui secondo l’accusa è coinvolto.

Don Librizzi avrebbe approfittato del suo ruolo di componente della commissione territoriale di Trapani per il riconoscimento della protezione internazionale, per costringere richiedenti asilo a prestazioni sessuali in cambio del rilascio dello status di rifugiati. Concussione e violenza sessuale pluriaggravata sono le imputazioni formulate nell’ordinanza di custodia cautelare emessa dal gip di Trapani su richiesta della Procura.

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Priest arrested over immigrant sexual abuse

ITALY
The Local

Updated: 24 Jun 2014

An Italian priest, who is also a director of the charity, Caritas, has been arrested in Sicily for allegedly sexually abusing immigrants.

Sergio Librizzi, Caritas director in Trapani, was arrested at the vicarage as he was preparing for mass, Adnkronos reported.

He is accused of at least ten episodes of sexual violence against immigrants in Sicily, in addition to facing charges of embezzlement.

“The sexual crimes relate to a number of subjects, both underage and adults, all non-EU citizens with whom the priest was in contact due to his position within Caritas,” Marcello Viola, the public prosecutor of Trapani, told Adnkronos.

Librizzi allegedly demanded sexual favours from immigrants in return for issuing documents.

Sicily is a frequent landing post for both economic migrants and asylum seekers arriving in Italy by boat, after crossing the Mediterranean sea from North Africa.

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Rome- Pope appoints Legion of Christ adviser, SNAP responds

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, June 24, 2014

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

The pope continues to distance himself from the scandal-ridden Legion of Christ. And he’s appointing a new adviser to the troubled order. We applaud this course of action.

[ABC News]

It’s smart public relations for Francis to stay away from the Legion. We share his apparent view that much reform is still needed in the Legion.

In any institution, reform must be preceded by exposing and sacking those who committed or concealed child sex crimes. The Legion hasn’t done this.

When it comes to clergy sex crimes and cover ups, the Legion continues to be perhaps the single most secretive Catholic group in the world. When they post on their websites the names, photos, whereabouts and work histories of every current and former Legion who hurt kids – directly by assault or indirectly by complicity – then they may have the right to claim they’ve begun to attack their corruption.

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Dominican leader coy on pedophilia ‘talk’ with Pope

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Jun 17

Santo Domingo.- President Danilo Medina said Sunday that he “spoke about everything” with Pope Francis, who received him in a private meeting at the Vatican.

“We spoke about many things. We spoke about everything,” he said when asked if he discussed with the Pontiff the pedophilia cases linked to catholic prelates in the country, specifically former Vatican envoy, bishop Jozef Wesolowski.

Medina’s statement again reveals his now habitual stance of shying away from controversial topics and cases of government corruption.

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Obispo ve a exnuncio en Roma

REPUBLICA DOMINICANA
El Dia

Santo Domingo.-El obispo auxiliar de la arquidiócesis de Santo Domingo, monseñor Víctor Masalles, reveló ayer que se sorprendió al ver en Roma al exnuncio apostólico Józef Wesolowski, acusado de abusar sexualmente contra menores en República Dominicana.

El Vaticano ha anunciado que el exnuncio Wesolowski será juzgado no sólo canónicamente por la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, sino también penalmente por el Tribunal Vaticano.

“Para mí fue una sorpresa ver a Wesolowski pasearse por la Via della Scrofa en Roma(una calle de Roma). El silencio de la Iglesia ha herido al pueblo de Dios”, indica Masalles en su cuenta de Twitter.

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Dominican Republic bishop questions the Vatican on sexual abuse

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- Santo Domingo Archdiocese auxiliary bishop Víctor Masalles on Monday affirmed he was surprised to see in Rome former Vatican envoy Józef Wesolowski, accused of sexually abusing boys in Dominican Republic.

The Holy See has announced that Wesolowski will be tried not only under canon law but also criminally by the Vatican Court.

“For me it was a surprise to see Wesolowski walking along Via della Scrofa in Roma (Rome street). The silence of the Church has injured the people of God,” tweeted Masalles.

Outlet eldia.com.do reports that it tried to contact Masalles for further details, but a source at his parish said the Auxiliary Bishop was in Rome last April for the canonization of late popes John PauI II and John XXIII.

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Bid to destroy papers unwise

CANADA
The StarPhoenix

Saskatoon lawyer Dan Shapiro is well-intentioned in applying to a court to have the private records and testimony of nearly 38,000 residential school abuse survivors destroyed, but the drastic measure should not go ahead.

Not only would it destroy unique information that provides great insight into the horrific history of Canada’s residential schools, but it would also be a disservice to the long-term interests of the descendants of the survivors who came forward with heart-wrenching stories of physical, emotional and sexual abuse that led to generations of family dysfunction and other problems that today marginalize too many First Nations people.

As chief adjudicator for the Independent Assessment Process (IAP) that assesses complaints of abuse and decides on compensation for survivors, Mr. Shapiro notes that the claims process was meant to be confidential and safe.

While it’s true that the documents include medical records and income tax information as well as graphic personal stories, his assessment is wrong that destroying all documentation is the only way to ensure the privacy of individuals and confidentiality of the files.

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Vatican to Name New Adviser to Oversee Legion

VATICAN CITY
ABC News (US)

VATICAN CITY — Jun 24, 2014

The superior of the Legion of Christ religious order says the Vatican next week will name a new adviser to help oversee it.

It’s the latest sign that Pope Francis doubts the Vatican’s three-year reform experiment has resolved all the order’s problems.

Francis has kept the Legion at arms’ length since he inherited the reform project launched after the Legion admitted its founder sexually abused his seminarians and fathered three children.

Francis has yet to meet with the new superior and didn’t send a message to the congregation when it met in January to chart its new course. The Vatican insisted on naming two members of the new government and during his recent trip to Jerusalem, Francis skipped a luncheon planned by the Legion and ate instead with the Franciscans.

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Tuam babies: How a small field in Ireland held big secret

IRELAND
BBC News

23 June 2014

When an inquiry into the Tuam home was announced, the Irish prime minister (Taoiseach) Enda Kenny said babies of unmarried parents had been treated as “an inferior sub-species” for decades.

It is believed nearly 800 children died at what was once a mother and baby home run by nuns in Tuam, County Galway.

BBC News NI Dublin correspondent Shane Harrison visited the Bon Secours home in County Galway and spoke to one man who has written two books about his forced separation from his mother.

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MEDIA EXAGGERATED HORROR TALE AT IRISH ORPHANAGE

IRELAND
The Associated Press

BY SHAWN POGATCHNIK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBLIN (AP) — Revelations this month that nuns had buried nearly 800 infants and young children in unmarked graves at an Irish orphanage during the last century caused stark headlines and stirred strong emotions and calls for investigation. Since then, however, a more sober picture has emerged that exposes how many of those headlines were wrong.

The case of the Tuam “mother and baby home” offers a study in how exaggeration can multiply in the news media, embellishing occurrences that should have been gripping enough on their own.

The key fact is that a researcher, Catherine Corless, spent years seeking records of all the children who died in the orphanage in County Galway during its years of operation from 1925 to 1961. She found 797 death records – and only one record that one of the youngsters had been buried alongside relatives in a Catholic cemetery.

The rest, Corless surmised, were likely interred in unmarked graves on the orphanage grounds, including in a disused septic tank. She and other Tuam residents called for a state-funded investigation to identify remains and give the children a proper memorial.

The reports of unmarked graves shouldn’t have come as a surprise to the Irish public, who for decades have known that some of the 10 defunct “mother and baby homes,” which chiefly housed the children of unwed mothers, held grave sites filled with forgotten dead.

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AP: Parts Of Irish ‘Mass Graves’ Story Exaggerated By Media

UNITED STATES
WGBH News

By SCOTT NEUMAN
Originally published on Mon June 23, 2014

The Associated Press today offers “a more sober picture” than it and other news organizations (including NPR) did earlier this month regarding reports of nearly 800 bodies of infants and young children at a former Catholic home for unwed mothers in Ireland.

The case of the “mother and baby home,” located in the town of Tuam near Galway city, “offers a study in how exaggeration can multiply in the news media, embellishing occurrences that should have been gripping enough on their own,” the AP writes.

The reports were based on research by Catherine Corless, who spent years seeking records of the deaths of children at the orphanage during the years it was open, from 1925 to 1961.

Specifically, the AP points to an investigation by The Irish Times in Dublin that revealed discrepancies in maps used by Corless to determine where the bodies might have ended up. It also said reports that many of the children had never been baptized were rebutted by records. Other evidence called into question whether the decommissioned septic tank could have been used as a burial site, the AP said.

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Kansas City, Kan., archdiocese restricts retired priest accused of inappropriate conduct

KANSAS
The Kansas City Star

BY JUDY L. THOMAS
THE KANSAS CITY STAR
06/23/2014

The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas has restricted the duties of a retired priest after receiving what it says are two credible allegations of inappropriate conduct.

The allegations did not involve minors, the archdiocese said in a brief article published in the June 20 issue of The Leaven, the archdiocesan newspaper.

Duties of the Rev. George Seuferling, who retired in 2001, are now limited to performing weddings and funerals for family members, according to the article.

“The archdiocese asks anyone who has knowledge of inappropriate conduct by any priest, deacon, employee or volunteer to please contact the confidential report line at (913) 647-3051 or civil authorities,” the article said.

A victims advocacy group criticized the archdiocese for not notifying a wider audience about the allegations.

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That Story About Irish Babies Buried in a Septic Tank Was Shocking. It Also Wasn’t Entirely True.

IRELAND
The New Republic

By Jason Walsh

The headlines out of Ireland reverberated around the world, and how could they not? As reports had it, over several decades nearly 800 dead babies had been secretly dumped in a septic tank at a Roman Catholic maternity home for unwed mothers and their children in Tuam, County Galway. Ireland’s dark past was under the microscope again, and everyone wanted a peek.

London’s Independent called the discovery at St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home “the Irish Holocaust,” a term usually reserved for the 1845–52 famine. The Guardian demanded, “Tell us the truth about the children dumped in Galway’s mass graves.” The Washington Post headlined its report, “Bodies of 800 children, long-dead, found in septic tank at former Irish home for unwed mothers,” which was promptly picked up by The Sydney Morning Herald. The spetic-tank claims were reported to readers of publications as diverse as The New York Daily News, Salon and Al-Jazeera. Weeks later and the scandal rumbled on, dominating the news in Ireland, a searing indictment of a country already home to too many scandals involving the historical nexus of Church and state.

The only problem was that in the gleeful rush to report and judge, the truth got lost.

The Associated Press last week issued a lengthy correction admitting that the septic tank might not contain any human remains at all; the wire service had also incorrectly reported that the children hadn’t been baptized because they were born out of wedlock. Other media outlets have been slower to dial down the hyperbole. Britain’s Guardian newspaper amended a headline on an opinion piece, removing the “dumped” claim, but most outlets have left their fact-free speculation to stand.

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Beacon Hill Roll Call, June 16-20

MASSACHUSETTS
Wicked Local Hamilton

STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS FOR SEX CRIMES AGAINST CHILDREN (H 4126) House 147-0, approved a bill increasing the statute of limitations during which a person can file a civil suit for child sexual abuse. Current law allows victims to file a suit up until the age of 21 while the bill would increase the age to 53. The extension is retroactive for claims against actual perpetrators of abuse and prospective for others with indirect liability like supervisors.

Supporters said that many children who are victims of sexual abuse are not emotionally ready to confront the situation until many years later. They noted the bill also would help hold institutions accountable for negligent behavior in supervising perpetrators of these crimes.

The Senate approved the bill on a voice vote without a roll call. Final approval is needed in both branches before the measure goes to Gov. Patrick.

A “Yes” vote is for the bill.

Rep. Paul Brodeur Yes
Rep. Leah Cole Yes
Rep. Michael Costello Yes
Rep. Diana DiZoglio Yes
Rep. Paul Donato Yes
Rep. James Dwyer Yes
Rep. Lori Ehrlich Yes
Rep. Christopher Fallon Yes
Rep. Robert Fennell Yes
Rep. Ann-Margaret Ferrante Yes
Rep. Bradford Hill Yes
Rep. Bradley Jones Yes
Rep. John Keenan Didn’t Vote
Rep. James Lyons Yes
Rep. Wayne Matewsky Yes
Rep. Leonard Mirra Yes
Rep. Jerald Parisella Yes
Rep. Carl Sciortino has resigned
Rep. Theodore Speliotis Yes
Rep. RoseLee Vincent Yes
Rep. Steven Walsh has resigned
Rep. Donald Wong Yes

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OPINION: Father Brian Lucas must stand down

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By Peter Gogarty June 23, 2014

IN the NSW Parliament recently, Barry O’Farrell, the man who established the Special Commission of Inquiry into certain matters regarding two paedophile priests in the Hunter Valley, rose to his feet and gave the Catholic Church, its bishops and Father Brian Lucas a spanking regarding their lame response to Commissioner Margaret Cuneen’s report and findings.

Pushed by a number of journalists, and by the Newcastle Herald in particular, the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference subsequently made a brief statement on June 18.

It said: “Father Lucas has the support of the bishops because the report did not make adverse findings as to credit, nor did it recommend any action be taken with respect of Father Lucas.”

Around about the same time as this was unfolding, Father Lucas was giving evidence before the national royal commission, and for those of us who saw his evidence at the Special Commission of Inquiry, there was a sense of déjà vu.

It was almost as if Father Lucas was reading from his own transcript – he didn’t keep notes so that the “interviewee” would not be put off from making admissions, conceded that a consequence of his actions was that there was no “paper trail” that might be used in later police prosecutions, didn’t remember a particular offender but conceded he probably interviewed him, didn’t go to the police because victims would not have wanted him to, and so on.

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Child sex abuse statute change heads to Governor’s desk

MASSACHUSETTS
WWLP

BOSTON (STATE HOUSE) – Legislators on Monday sent to the governor’s desk a bill extending the statute of limitations in civil child sex abuse cases.

House and Senate lawmakers voted last week on the bill (H 4126), which would extend the statute to 35 years after a victim turns 18, up from three years.

Under the bill, an individual could file a lawsuit until he or she turns 53 years old. The bill is also retroactive, allowing individuals who realize later in life that they’ve suffered emotional and psychological harm to file a claim seven years after the realization, up from three years.

Lawmakers also enacted a bill aimed at enhancing access to mental health treatment services (H 3704).

The bill requires health insurers to make utilization review criteria for mental health services publicly available by August 2014, instead of Oct. 2015, the date currently in Chapter 224, the health care cost containment law passed in 2012.

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Sunday School Teacher Pleads Guilty to Child Porn

PENNSYLVANIA
CSNPhilly

June 23, 2014

A Delaware County Sunday school teacher pleaded guilty on Monday to child pornography charges.

Steven Almond, a former Deacon at Middletown Presbyterian church where he taught Sunday School and coached basketball, was arrested last year after detectives found dozens of child porn videos on his home computer.

In June, 2013, police searched Almond’s home on W. Forestview Road in Parkside and pulled out four computers, a hard drive, flash drives, multiple cell phones and nearly two dozen CD/ DVDs.

Detectives say they found more than 50 videos believed to be child pornography, some of which showed children who appeared to be under the age of 5.

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Former priest back in court

AUSTRALIA
South Coast Register

June 24, 2014

A FORMER Catholic priest, who worked in the Shoalhaven in the 1970s, facing five charges of indecently assaulting children, appeared in Parramatta Local Court on Monday.

Robert Flaherty, 70, who now lives at Wentworth Falls in the Blue Mountains, appeared before Magistrate McGlynn, facing five charges of indecent assault against children.

Magistrate McGlynn adjourned the matters until August 1 for possible committal for sentence.

The offences were alleged to have taken place in the Shoalhaven and Sydney up to 40 years ago, with the alleged victims aged between 11 and 15.

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Cardinal Bertone’s move into spacious new Vatican apartment delayed by remodeling woes

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone has been unable to move into a new apartment at the Vatican, because the firm remodeling the space has declared bankruptcy.

The former Vatican Secretary of State had been scheduled to take up residence this week in a large apartment in the San Carlo palace, inside the Vatican grounds. But the Italian daily Il Messaggero reports that the move has been delayed because of the collapse of the firm that had been contracted to combine two existing apartments into one spacious unit with a gracious rooftop terrace.

Reports that Cardinal Bertone was moving into a luxurious apartment had stirred complaints in Rome, because the cardinal is a Salesian priest who has taken a vow of poverty and because Pope Francis has advocated a modest style of living for Vatican clerics.

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Cardinal Levada advances to announcer’s post

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Sentinel

Cardinal William Levada, former archbishop of Portland, has become the man who will announce the name of the new pope, should there be a papal election in the next two years.

That’s because of the domino effect after a set of seniority based honorific promotions at the Vatican.

At the weekend’s ordinary consistory — a gathering of cardinals — Pope Francis announced the promotion of six of the men from cardinal deacon to cardinal priest.

The promotions are mainly ceremonial, but there is one main practical change. One of those promoted was French Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, who had been the most senior cardinal deacon. In the post, it was his responsibility to announce the election and name of a new pope, which he did in March of last year.

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Are Church leaders listening to the wake-up calls?

INDIA
UCA News

Fr Myron Pereria, Mumbai India June 24, 2014

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, former Vatican Secretary of State and right hand of Pope Benedict XVI, has been implicated in a multi-million dollar fraud and embezzlement case. He is also in hot water for his new apartment, infinitewly more luxurious than the pope’s own lodgings.

This somehow typifies and also casts a depressing shadow on the way the Church government has been run over the past few decades.

The degree of ‘moral turpitude’ at the highest levels astounds the imagination. Are cardinals and bishops no better than crude politicians after all?

For a long time, for centuries in fact, the Catholic Church was one of the few institutions where a young man, with no family connections and little money, could rise to eminence on the basis of intelligence, shrewdness and ambition alone.

If in addition, he was servile enough to authority and avoided scandals, especially sexual ones, he could go far.

As a tried and tested formula, it worked for centuries, and still does. As proof, just look at the popes, the bishops and the senior clergy who have “made it”. All of them belong to an institution called the Church to which they have given their lives, from which they draw certain benefits, and whose stability and public image they are sworn to uphold.

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Wife defends Jehovah’s Witness elder Mark Sewell accused of sexual assaults

WALES
Wales Online

Mary Sewell told Merthyr Crown Court that she didn’t believe her husband Mark Sewell was guilty

The wife of a former Jehovah’s Witness elder accused of sex assaults told a jury that she was unconcerned at seeing a semi-naked teen lying on their bed.

Mary Elizabeth Sewell, speaking at Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court yesterday, said the girl was lying face down, clothed from her bottom down but with her top half covered with a towel, for her husband Mark Sewell to massage her.

“It did not cause me any concern,” Mrs Sewell, a beautician, told the jury.

“I am quite aware that it happened. She was often massaged. She had shoulder and top of the neck problems and she used to ask him if he would massage her.”

She denied seeing her husband straddling the girl and said that her husband had an interest in massage and that her and her husband had performed massages on each other.

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Salvos sorry for abuse ‘greatest failure’

AUSTRALIA
Echo Netdaily

The Salvation Army says it is profoundly sorry for the abuse suffered by children in its care, and events revealed by the royal commission into child sexual abuse represent the greatest failure in its history.

However, the organisation maintains sexual abuse was not widespread after the commission heard evidence of more than 100 cases of children suffering horrendous abuse in homes run by the Salvation Army in Queensland and NSW in the 1960s and 1970s.

As the royal commission moved to finalise its investigation into the church on Monday, counsel for the Salvation Army, Kate Eastman, challenged a statement from counsel assisting the commission that sexual abuse was ‘widespread’ at boys’ homes it ran.

In an apology to survivors, Ms Eastman read a statement from the Salvation Army saying the organisation was ‘profoundly sorry for failing to care for you as you deserved, for the neglect, hurt, abuse and deprivation of human rights that all children are entitled to’.

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Royal Commission: Vatican’s handling of sexual abuse claims against Wollongong priest John Nestor in spotlight

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Antonette Collins

It took nearly 20 years for the Vatican to dismiss a Wollongong parish priest after allegations against him first emerged, the royal commission into child sexual abuse has heard.

Father John Nestor was charged and convicted of indecently assaulting a 15-year-old altar boy in Wollongong in 1996. A year later he was acquitted on appeal.

When further allegations surfaced about him engaging in inappropriate behaviour with boys at holiday camps, the local diocese tried to have him removed from the ministry.

Counsel assisting the commission Angus Stewart told the hearing the Vatican upheld an appeal by Mr Nestor in 2001.

“The congregation ruled that the Towards Healing Assessment process had not complied with the procedural requirements for an preliminary investigation under canon law,” he said.

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Why Bishop Morris was sacked

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank Brennan | 23 June 2014

Frank Brennan launches Benedict, Me and the Cardinals Three by Bishop William Morris.

I am delighted to be asked to participate in the launch of Bishop William Morris’ book. Bill was bishop of Toowoomba for 18 years. This book is the story of his forced retirement at the insistence of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI and at the instigation of three Roman curial cardinals all of whom have now left the Vatican, having passed retirement age. Naturally, we were not expecting any of those four to be with us this evening. Sadly Bill could not be with us either, being laid up in a hospital bed in wintry Queensland.

In the 1960s, I lived for five years in the Toowoomba diocese while attending Downlands College, a boarding school for boys conducted by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart. At that time, I had regularly to deny any relationship to the then Bishop of Toowoomba William Brennan who gave very long sermons on hot and cold days much to the displeasure of the Downlands students. I used to emerge from chapel rightly claiming to be from another branch of the family back there in the bog.

Some of the key priests who appear in Bill Morris’ book also were educated at Downlands. The MSCs had a no nonsense style to them, enjoying their independence from the local bishop while being very dedicated to the pastoral care of people in the far flung country diocese and always attentive to the pastoral requests of the parish priests, a disproportionate number of whom went to Downlands.

I remember one MSC arriving unexpectedly at the school mid-year to teach French. It was just after Humanae Vitae and he had expressed some reservations while ministering south of the Tweed River.

One of the ex-Downlanders to appear in the book is Bill Morris’ Vicar-General Peter Dorfield who, true to form as one of the world’s most punctilious note takers, provided a detailed account to Bill about his unfortunate meeting with the papal visitator Archbishop Charles Chaput who came to the diocese for four days (including Anzac Day) in 2007 to report on the state of the diocese. Chaput told Dorfield that Morris was:

a good, humane and prayerful bishop but innocent and naïve and open to manipulation because of (his) great desire to see good in everyone, and that people had taken advantage of (his) goodness and trust. (He) had been captured, manipulated and misled by a so-called progressive group of priests in the diocese who were in fact ‘running the diocese’; as a result of the actions of these priests, (he) had been led astray and now needed to recant, and in effect throw (himself) on the mercy of the Vatican authorities, promising a more orthodox and obedient future.

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Wolllongong Catholic leaders to give evidence in royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By KATE McILWAIN June 23, 2014

Some of Australia’s most senior Catholic leaders – as well as key Wollongong church figures – will appear before the royal commission into child sexual abuse’s investigation into Wollongong’s Catholic Diocese over the next two weeks.

The public hearing, which begins in Sydney on Tuesday, is the first time the actions of the Catholic Church in Wollongong have come under the microscope of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

It will focus on how the diocese and the Vatican responded to allegations of sexual assault against then Father John Gerard Nestor in the 1990s.

The witness list includes Adelaide Archbishop Phillip Wilson, who was Wollongong’s bishop from 1996 to 2000, and the general secretary of the Catholic Bishops Conference Father Brian Lucas.

Last week, former premier Barry O’Farrell called for Fr Lucas to be sacked, after Commissioner Margaret Cunneen’s report found he had failed to act since 1993 when he knew about child sexual abuse in the Newcastle Maitland Diocese.

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Royal commission into sex abuse: 20 years to fire Wollongong priest

AUSTRALIA
Illawarra Mercury

By Annette Blackwell June 24, 2014

A Wollongong priest wasn’t fired until 20 years after complaints about him molesting young boys became known, and the Pope was the only one with the power to dismiss him from the priesthood, an inquiry has been told.

At a hearing in Sydney the royal commission into child sexual abuse is looking at how the Catholic Church under its own law – canon law – deals with priests and others against whom allegations have been made but no convictions obtained.

In particular, it is looking at the case of John Gerard Nestor, 50, who was a priest in the Wollongong diocese when he was charged in 1997 with the indecent assault of a teenage altar boy.

The priest admitted in his 1997 court case that he had slept on mattresses on a floor with the boy and his younger brother in July 1991, but he denied assaulting the boy.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott, then a federal parliamentary secretary to the employment minister, told the court at the time ‘‘he (Nestor) was … a beacon of humanity at the seminary’’.

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Defrocked priest pleads not guilty to new sex abuse charges

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

Convicted child molester and defrocked Catholic priest Daniel McCormack pleaded not guilty Monday to new sexual abuse charges stemming from a 2005 incident.

McCormack pleaded not guilty to three counts of felony aggravated criminal sexual abuse before Judge Angela Munari Petrone, court records show.

At a bond hearing in May, prosecutors said the alleged victim was 10 and a parishioner at St. Agatha in the 3100 block of West Douglas, where McCormack worked as a priest.

The boy was participating in an after-school program at the church and the alleged abuse happened between September 2005 and December 2005. The alleged victim disclosed the abuse in 2013.

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Vatican overturned bishop’s ban on priest

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

Senior church official Brian Lucas has been asked to explain why he didn’t take notes when interviewing abusive priests.

Brian Lucas, the senior churchman who former NSW premier Barry O’Farrell wants sacked, has been asked at a royal commission to explain his practice of not taking notes while interviewing abusive priests.

Fr Lucas, the general-secretary of the church’s national body the Conference of Bishops, was making his second royal commission appearance in two weeks on Tuesday.

Justice Peter McClellan questioned Fr Lucas’s practice at a Sydney hearing in which the commission is looking at how the Catholic Church, under its own canon law, deals with priests and others against whom allegations have been made.

As a member of the church’s special issues committee in 1993, Fr Lucas interviewed John Gerard Nestor, a priest in the NSW Wollongong diocese, who was defrocked by the Vatican in 2008.

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‘Still a lot we have to do’: Winona Diocese releases new info on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

[press packet]

Jerome Christenson Daily News

The Bishop believes.

Bishop John Quinn, at a Monday-morning news conference the Diocese of Winona held to release new information on sexual abuse alleged against 13 former priests of the Winona diocese, said he believes the abuse actually did take place.

“They don’t make these things up,” he said of those who have come forward to report sexual abuse.

Quinn spoke candidly and at length about the cases, acknowledging the “deep wounds” inflicted by abusive clergy and offering his apologies to “anyone who has been harmed.”

“Words cannot express my deep sorrow,” he said.

Prior to the bishop’s statement, the Diocese distributed a summary of the accusations made against each priest, including a photo, brief biography and a list of their pastoral assignments, as well as the number of accusations made against each and when they were made.

The information, which did not go into detail about any of the accusations, built upon the list of names the diocese released in December 2013 in response to an ongoing lawsuit against both the diocese and the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis.

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June 23, 2014

Boys’ home abuse our greatest failure, says Salvation Army

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JUNE 24, 2014

NSW Police are investigating claims of child-sex abuse at a ­Salvation Army boys’ home the church has described as the “greatest failure” in its history.

The investigation focuses on allegations of abuse at the Gill Memorial Boys’ Home in Goulburn in country NSW, and in particular against one officer, who cannot be named.

The case is among more than 160 referred to various police ­forces across the country by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which is due to publish its first interim report next week.

Evidence before the commission shows nine children allege they were abused by the officer, who in August 1974 pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting one boy at the Gill home.

A separate 1996 prosecution was abandoned due to the officer’s apparent ill health, Salvation Army barrister Kate Eastman SC told the commission, but “these matters appear now they may have been revisited’’.

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Former Milwaukee priest removed from Chicago area church

CHICAGO (IL)
WISN

MILWAUKEE —A former Milwaukee priest was suddenly removed from his position at a suburban Chicago church over the weekend.

Father James Dokos was a trusted leader and pastor for years at the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church until 2012, when he transferred to Glenview, Ill. Then questions began surfacing about some lavish spending of church money.

The famous Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church on Milwaukee’s northwest side has been gaining new attention because of allegations of fraud against a former pastor.

WISN 12 News began investigating last fall, after Milwaukee County prosecutors served multiple search warrants stating they were seeking information on Dokos’ use of more than $100,000 in a trust fund.

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Former Wauwatosa priest to be charged in handling of $100,000

WISCONSIN
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

The former priest at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Wauwatosa who is accused of misappropriating more than $100,000 from a trust he managed there is in the process of being charged with theft, the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office said Monday.

Father James Dokos has been named in a charging document that has been provided to his attorney and the church’s parish council, Assistant District Attorney David Fleiss said. He could not say when the charge would be filed.

Dokos, who was transferred to SS Peter & Paul Orthodox Church in Glenview, Ill., in 2012, has been suspended from his duties there, according to a story in the Chicago Tribune. Efforts to reach the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago on Monday were not successful.

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Salvation Army sack accused sex abusers John McIver and Colin Haggar

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

JANET FIFE-YEOMANS THE DAILY TELEGRAPH JUNE 24, 2014

THE Salvation Army has sacked an officer accused of being a notorious child abuser — six months after giving him a silver star award.

Major John McIver was dismissed last week and allegations against him, including raping a boy, have been referred to the police, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse was told yesterday.

The Salvation Army has also sacked a second officer, Lieutenant Colonel Colin Haggar, 25 years after he admitted sexually assaulting a girl aged eight. Mr Haggar was sacked after the incident but reinstated in 1993 with former Salvos chief of personnel Major Peter Farthing stating in the commission as late as April this year that sexually assaulting an eight-year-old girl did not make Mr Haggar a paedophile. There have been 19 Salvation Army officers named as perpetrators of abuse, counsel Kate Eastman told the commission in final submissions.

Mr McIver, who has denied all claims, was not suspended until January when the commission began hearing evidence he had sexually and physically abused boys from 1974 at the Akira Salvation Army home for boys at Indooroopilly in Brisbane.

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Diocese of Winona releases sex abuse details

MINNESOTA
News 8000

Author: Leah Linscheid, llinscheid@wkbt.com
Published On: Jun 23 2014

WINONA, Minn. (WKBT) –
In a move some are calling ‘unprecedented,’ the Catholic Diocese of Winona is releasing details of years of sexual abuse by priests in its churches.

Back in December, courts ordered the diocese to release the names of 14 priests accused of sexual abuse dating back to the 1960s. More than six months later, the diocese is now voluntarily sharing the details behind those accusations.

“We are establishing and taking back, we hope, our credibility,” said Bishop John Quinn.

The reports show most accusations stemmed from the 1970s and 80s. In one case, the report shows a Winona priest was accused 36 different times of sexually abusing a child. In a handful of cases, priests were repeatedly placed in treatment after accusations surfaced – but they returned to the diocese just months later under a different position or parish.

“In nearly all the cases, the priests who were returned to ministry after treatment were placed back into parishes based on the widespread belief that they could be rehabilated,” said Nelle Moriarty, chairperson of the Diocese of Winona Review Board. “Today as a society, we now know that rehabilitation as a sxual offender is most likely not possible.”

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Kingsport priest denied appeal

TENNESSEE
WCYB

By Kristen Quon, kquon@wcyb.com

KINGSPORT, Tenn. –
The State Supreme Court has upheld the conviction against a former Kingsport priest, Warren Sullivan county district attorney, Barry Staubus told News 5 that he received word today, Monday June 23rd, that the 2011 conviction of William Casey’s appeal was denied.

A judge sentenced Casey to more than 30 years in prison after a jury found him guilty of sexual misconduct and rape of Warren Tucker.

Tucker says, Casey abused him for five years beginning in 1975 when he was an altar boy at St. Dominic’s Catholic Church in Kingsport.

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Irish priests are not smiling because of women: Irish ex-president mocks Pope Francis! Irish nuns akin to Nazis

UNITED STATES
POPE FRANCIS the CON-Christ.

June 21, 2014

Paris Arrow

With compilation of Tuam nuns news

Pope Francis has called-in sick for the summer and has cancelled even his well-oiled money machine Wednesday Angelus where he shows all his teeth nonstop to the screeching adulation of Francis-Maniacs who sound more like Catholic zombies in Brad Pitt’s World War Z movie and are probably making him more sick and there’s no antidote to it, read our article, Pope Francis is sick with lies, lies, lies & burdened yoke from Opus Dei Beast PR Deceits Team weighs heavy on Jesuit puppet pope. But aside from the sick (only one-year old) pope, Irish priests these days too are depressed and not smiling because of three women specifically who are giving them – and to Pope Francis – messages unparalleled to Martin Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses in 1517. Martin Luther pointed out the 95 corruptions in the Vatican especially its rampant sale of indulgences – to build the mammoth St. Peter’s Basilica – that condemned to hell even the poor if they did not buy them.

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Scottsville pastor suspected of sexually assaulting teen in church

KENTUCKY
WSMV

Reported by Nancy Amons

SCOTTSVILLE, KY (WSMV) –
A southern Kentucky pastor is accused of sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy in his church, and police are worried there may be more victims.

Roy Neal Yoakem is the pastor at the New Gospel Outreach Church in Scottsville, KY.

Authorities say they believe at least one alleged incident happened at the church, and they’re investigating another alleged incident they believe occurred in Gallatin.

Gallatin police are expected to serve more warrants, including a charge of rape by an authority figure.

Yoakem’s name was covered up on the sign outside the church on Friday, the day after the church’s board appointed Stephen Bratcher as interim pastor.

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EX-PRIEST PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO LATEST SEX ABUSE CHARGES

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

Monday, June 23, 2014

CHICAGO (WLS) — Former Roman Catholic priest Daniel McCormack appeared in court Monday to face new child sex abuse charges.

McCormack pleaded not guilty. The defrocked priest has pleaded guilty in several previous cases.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests say there may be more victims yet to come forward.

“I think it’s really important that we work hard to create an environment where victims feel safe to report, and I’m not sure that Cardinal George has created that kind of an environment in this church,” said SNAP’s Barbara Blaine.

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Winona diocese releases more details about priest abuse

MINNESOTA
WXOW

WINONA, Minn. (KTTC) — The Diocese of Winona voluntarily released more details Monday about 13 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

The diocese said it’s releasing the information in an effort to be transparent and promote healing.

The names of the accused priests were revealed in December as part of a court order. But details about the accusations against them weren’t released.

The diocese held a news conference Monday morning at the Cathedral of Sacred Heart. The diocese said nine of the 13 priests on the list are dead and two have been laicized, or removed from the priesthood. Two more priests have laicization pending. The diocese said none of the priests credibly accused of sexual abuse are still in active ministry.

Nearly all of the sexual abuse committed happened in the 1970s and early 1980s, according to the diocese. The diocese said nearly all of the priests who had sexually abused children were sent for treatment and diagnosis when the diocese learned about the accusations.

The list of priests includes:

Thomas P. Adamson Permanently removed from ministry in 1984; laicized 2009
Sylvester F. Brown Deceased 2010
Joseph C. Cashman Permanently removed from ministry in 1992; laicization pending in Rome
Louis G. Cook Deceased 2004
William D. Curtis Deceased 2001
John R. Feiten Deceased 2001
Richard E. Hatch Deceased 2005
Ferdinand L. Kaiser Deceased 1973
Jack L. Krough Permanently removed from ministry in 2002; laicization pending in Rome
Michael J. Kuisle Deceased 1971
James W. Lennon Deceased 2000
Leland J. Smith Permanently removed from ministry in 1994; laicized April 2014
Robert H. Taylor Deceased 2012

Priests accused of abuse after 2004

Leo Charles Koppala Permanently removed from ministry 2014.

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Diocese Releases More Information on Accused Priests

MINNESOTA
KEYC

By Dan Ruiter, News Director

WINONA, Minn. – The Diocese of Winona Monday released much more information on 14 priests accused of abuse in the last 50+ years – and some of the abuse occurred while they were serving parishes in our region. The Diocese did so because of what it calls “an unprecedented effort for transparency and healing.”

Nine of the 14 priests on the list are deceased, two have been laicized, and two are pending laicization. Officials with the Winona Diocese say no priests of the Diocese of Winona who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse are still in active ministry.

At least 5 of those 14 accused priests served area churches at the time the allegations were made.

Louis Cook was accused of child abuse that reportedly took place between 1966 and 1969 during the time he was serving parishes in Delevan and Easton. However, it should be noted that four days after the complaint was filed with the Diocese, the alleged victim withdrew her complaint. Father Cook had no other accusations.

William Curtis had a pair of child sexual abuse accusations. One of those complaints was filed during his time in Good Thunder.

Richard Hatch was removed from his duties in 1963; but faced accusations of child sexual abuse and additional accusations while he was serving the Church in Saint James.

Ferdinand Kaiser pleaded guilty to Sodomy charges in 1968 in Waseca County. He was serving a church in Iosco, which is between Janesville and Waseca. He resigned from the ministry in 1968.

Leo Charles Koppala is the only priest in the Winona Diocese facing allegations of abuse that occurred after 2004. Koppala was convicted of 2nd Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct in March 2014. He’s been deported to his native India and his home Diocese in India has been notified of his conviction.

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Diocese of Winona releases new info on abusive priests

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

The Bishop believes.

Bishop John Quinn told a Monday morning news conference that he bleieves the sexual abuse alleged against 13 former priests of the Winona diocese actually did take place.

“They don’t make these things up,” he said of those who have come forward to report sexual abuse.

Prior to the bishop’s statement, the Diocese distributed a summary of the accusations made against each priest, a photo, brief biography and a list of their pastoral assignments. The information will be made available on the diocesan website.

The information released Monday expands upon the information that accompanied the initial release of the names of the 13 “credibly accused” priests on Dec. 16. Quinn said the information was compiled with the concern to protect the identity of victims and the innocent and to comply “with privacy laws related to medical and mental-health information.

“We are committed first and foremost for the compassionate healing for the victims and their families,” said Bishop John Quinn in a statement. “We remain steadfast to finding and telling the truth and are vigilantly committed to ensuring these unspeakable crimes against children never happen again.”

The abuse occurred primarily in the 1970s and 1980s. Nine of the 13 priests on the list are deceased, two have been laicized, and two are pending laicization. None are in active ministry.

The highest-profile priest on the list, Thomas Adamson, has admitted to having sexual contact with at least a dozen boys over two decades of ministry, stopping only when one of his victims came forward publicly in 1984. He continues to draw a monthly pension check from the diocese, as required by law, the diocese has said.

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While church volunteer was molesting girl, TN pastor was diverting cops, lawsuit claims

TENNESSEE
The Raw Story

By Travis Gettys
Monday, June 23, 2014

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims has asked prosecutors in Tennessee to investigate whether a Baptist minister altered his account of sex abuse by a church volunteer to protect himself from civil liability.

The family of a girl who was molested by a member of First Baptist Church of Bemis sued the church last month for negligence after the church allowed Chad Lutrell to volunteer at Vacation Bible School five years ago, when the abuse took place.

The suit, which seeks $2 million in damages, claimed then-pastor Mark McSwain allowed Lutrell to work with children even though he knew of previous allegations of sexual misconduct.

According to the suit, Lutrell had been seen at church kissing girls between the ages of 6 and 10 on the mouth, and three adult women said he had stalked, threatened, and harassed them.

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KS- Abuse allegations made against KC priest, SNAP responds

KANSAS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, June 23, 2014

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

Two credible abuse allegations have been made against a retired Kansas City priest. We are saddened that KC Catholic officials are apparently trying to keep this quiet by putting it only in a church publication. They should be alerting all the parishioners and the public very aggressively, begging others with information or suspicions about this priest to step forward, get help, call police, expose wrongdoers and start healing.

We are grateful to the brave victims who spoke up and hope they will continue to seek help.

[The Leaven]

Fr. George Seuferling, who retired in 2001, is accused of inappropriate behavior with non-minors. Officials with the Archdiocese of Kansas City, KS say the allegations are credible. Fr. Seuferling’s work is supposedly being limited to doing wedding and funerals of relatives. We believe a stricter limitation should be imposed. At a minimum, for the safety of the public, he should be sent to a remote, secure, independent treatment center for evaluation.

We hope anyone who saw, suspects, or suffered child sexual abuse by Fr. Seuferling will immediately call secular law enforcement. It is never too late to report what you know and doing so will help keep other people safe.

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The Best Revolutions Begin With One Small Action

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on June 23, 2014

This blog has long rallied against the problem of the cover-up of sexual abuse in public schools. Unfortunately, the victims in these cases—when they are ready and able to come forward and get accountability— usually don’t have criminal and civil rights to expose the abuse. As a result, victims and the public are seldom, if ever, able to learn the full story. …

But a little law in Hawaii may be starting a revolution. On Friday, Hawaii’s civil window for victims of child sex abuse was extended for two more years. But it was also expanded. The new law added the state and counties as potential defendants. That means that if kids were sexually abused in public schools and institutions, they have the next two years to come forward and expose the crime. And if the crime was covered up by a government official, school administration, or bureaucracy, we will find that out, too.

My hope? Other states will look to Hawaii as an example. And a revolution will begin.

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MN- Victims want whereabouts of predator priests

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by priests

For immediate release: Monday, June 23, 2014

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

Information on abuse is good. Action on abuse is better.

And current information beats old information. So we beg Winona Bishop John Quinn to disclose the whereabouts of Fr. Joseph C. Cashman, Fr. Jack L. Krough, and Fr. Leland J. Smith – all of whom are living and are defrocked or being defrocked. Any of these men could now be living next to a day care center (as a suspended Youngtown predator priest did for years) or school or playground. They could be babysitting neighbors’ kids in an apartment building filled with single immigrant mothers.

We also call on Quinn;

– to disclose whether proven, admitted or credibly accused Winona predator priests are getting any kind of supervision whatsoever,

– to write Vatican officials urging them to suspendFr. Carlos Urrutigoity, a credibly accused abusive priest who worked in several places, (Minnesota and Pennsylvania, Argentina and Switzerland), was the subject of a $454,000 settlement, and is now second in command of a diocese in Paraguay. (Scranton’s bishop has pledged to do this.)

[Times-Tribune]

[SNAP]

– to write South American church officials urging them to warn their flocks about Fr. Urrutigoity, and

– to write to bishops in India urging them to warn their flocks about Fr. Leo Charles Koppala who pleaded guilty in March to child sex crimes in Minnesota and has been deported to his native country.

Finally, we beg Bishop Quinn to aggressively reach out to his flock – using his bully pulpit, parish newsletters, diocesan website, and personal parish visits – and beg anyone who saw, suspects or suffered child sex crimes to come forward, report to police and start healing. A news conference is good, but in-person parish visits would be an effective follow-up.

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Eight kinds of power the Vatican exercises to control Catholics

UNITED KINGDOM
Church and State

Editor’s note: The following comes from Chapter 4 of N4CM Chairman Dr Stephen D Mumford’s book, American Democracy and the Vatican.

In 1980, Jean-Guy Vaillancourt, a Canadian Roman Catholic pro­fessor of sociology at the University of Montreal, published a book entitled Papal Power: A Study of Vatican Control Over Lay Catholic Elites.[11] This is a study of the techniques intensively used by the Vati­can in many countries to control Catholic laypersons in Italy over the past one hundred years. In 1875, the Vatican created a system of local parish committees of at least five members each, called Catholic Actions. These committees were created to organize laypersons to assist the Vatican in seizing control of local, state, and national politi­cal machinery. Over the years, the Church gained considerable experience in organizing these committees and in ensuring obedience and a very high degree of responsiveness to the chain of command by the committees. These committees and their more recent counterpart, civic committees, are highly effective in mobilizing Vatican efforts. Vaillancourt places the role of the committees in proper perspective by discussing

a famous open letter presented to the Pope in 1968 by dissatisfied Catholics from France and elsewhere. The letter severely criti­cized the Vatican’s excessive attachment to wealth and power, stressing the idea that Church authorities are too repressive and manipulative:

“The whole Church apparatus is organized for control: the Roman Curia controls the bishops, the bishops the clergy, the clergy controls the laity . . . and the lay Christians control (what an illusion!) mankind. Hence a multiplication of secretaries, commissions, structures, etc., with their programs and rules. . . . Underhand influences have suffocated the openness which had manifested itself at the lay conference in Rome, a congress which had very little communication with the bishops who were then meeting in a synod.”

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Allegations made against archdiocesan priest

KANSAS CITY (KS)
The Leaven – Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas

June 20, 2014

The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas has received two credible allegations of inappropriate conduct by Father George Seuferling. These allegations do not involve minors.

Father Seuferling, who retired in 2001, is now limited in his public exercise of priestly ministry to weddings and funerals for family members.

The archdiocese asks anyone who has knowledge of inappropriate conduct by any priest, deacon, employee or volunteer to please contact the confidential report line at (913) 647-3051 or civil authorities.

The archdiocese respects the sincere concerns of all individuals who bring forth allegations of misconduct and is fully committed to conducting thorough investigations of all such allegations and cooperating with law enforcement officials.

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Christian radio host in Michigan busted in child sex probe, feds say

MICHIGAN
New York Daily News

BY JOE KEMP
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Monday, June 23, 2014

A host for a Christian radio station in Michigan was busted for paying to have sex with minors, federal investigators said.

John Balyo, 35, was collared on child sex charges after investigators with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement linked him to a human trafficking case, authorities said.

Balyo — the morning host on WCSG Radio, based in Grand Rapids — allegedly paid an accused john, 41-year-old Ronald Lee Moser, to arrange sexual encounters with his victims.

Moser was arrested in early June, after officers with the federal agency’s Homeland Security Investigations unit raided his home — where they found him living with a 12-year-old boy and a stash of child pornography, authorities said.

Moser — who was allegedly running a website that allowed customers to pay for sex with underage boys — helped lead investigators to Balyo.

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WCSG general manager addresses Balyo arrest

MICHIGAN
WOOD TV

[with video]

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) – The general manager of a local Christian radio station addressed the highly publicized arrest of one of the station’s former morning personalities Monday on the air.

WCSG General Manager Chris Lemke went on air at 7:30 a.m. to make a statement about John Balyo, 35, who was arrested Friday at a Christian music festival in Gaylord, Mich.

Balyo is facing one county of first-degree criminal sexual conduct for allegedly paying a man named Ronald Moser to set up sexual encounters with minor victims at Grand Rapids-area hotels, according to a Homeland Security agent.

Lemke said WCSG, which is owned by Cornerstone University, officially parted ways with Balyo on Saturday.

The following is a transcription of Lemke’s radio address:

“This past Friday, the WCSG family was shocked and saddened to learn that WCSG morning show host John Balyo was arrested amid allegations which have since been much publicized.

On Saturday, WCSG and Cornerstone University ended its affiliation with John. We sincerely grieve over these recent events. Our family is deeply aching and we know that you may be hurting as well.

We know that no one, absolutely no one, is immune from falling into the darkness of sin and yet we have hope. Those who truly follow and live for Jesus Christ know that he alone has the power to restore broken lives and broken trust

In that light, I want you our radio family to know that more than ever, WCSG exists to serve as a Christ-centered influence, through compelling content for all of our platforms, through compassionate relationships. Our vision is to be that encouraging, engaging and equipping media influence for Christ, his church, his kingdom and you here in West Michigan and around the world.

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Former Christian radio host John Balyo also out as sheriff’s reserve after sex charges

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Agar | jagar@mlive.com
on June 23, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – John Balyo, the former Christian radio host accused of sexual assault, was fired as a Kent County sheriff’s reserve on Friday, June 20, when the allegations came to light.

Balyo served in the Enforcement Unit of Kent County Sheriff’s Department’s Traffic Squad.

The all-volunteer group provides assistance to Kent County Sheriff’s Department and other police agencies in the county at special events.

Undersheriff Jon Hess said the director of the Traffic Squad terminated Balyo on Friday. Balyo had volunteered as a reserve since 2004.

Hess reported no problems with Balyo’s work.

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WCSG prays for healing after radio host John Balyo busted on child-sex assault allegation

MICHIGAN
MLive

By John Agar | jagar@mlive.com
on June 23, 2014

GRAND RAPIDS, MI – WCSG general manager Chris Lemke urged listeners on Monday, June 23, to pray for former host John Balyo, his family, co-workers and alleged victims after Balyo was accused of paying for sexual encounters with children.

“God’s people will not lose heart,” Lemke told listeners.

He said the criminal allegations, reported late last week, have left staff in grief. Balyo’s morning co-host, Amanda, is taking this week off, but will return next week.

“And, we know you may be hurting as well,” Lemke told listeners.

“Yet, we have hope.”

He said that a listener outpouring of support, in text messages and emails to the station, have buoyed Balyo’s co-workers, who were in disbelief after hearing the allegations.

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Christian radio host arrested in Gaylord on child sex charges

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free press

By Bob Brenzing, Christopher Zoladz and Phil Dawson

GAYLORD — WCSG Radio announced Saturday that it has fired personality John Balyo after the 35-year old Caledonia resident was arrested Friday on child sex charges.

Cornerstone University released this statement Saturday: “Effective today, John Balyo is no longer affiliated with WCSG Radio. Chris Lemke, general manager of WCSG-FM, will address this matter on-air at 7:30 am during Monday’s (June 23) WCSG morning show.”

Balyo was arrested on charges of first-degree criminal sexual conduct.

He was arrested around 11:30 a.m. Friday at the Big Ticket Festival, a Christian music gathering near Gaylord. The arrest was made by officers with Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), Michigan State Police and the Battle Creek Police Department.

Authorities say Balyo allegedly paid another person, who is a defendant in another child exploitation case, to arrange for sexual encounters with minor victims. Further details are being withheld until Balyo appears in court.

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Can The Institute in Basic Life Principles Be Trusted to Police Itself?

UNITED STATES
Farmer, Jaffe, Weissing, Edwards, Fisto and Lehrman

Posted on Mon, Jun 23, 2014

by Adam Horowitz

The Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP) is an international conservative Christian organization based in Oak Brook, Illinois with millions of followers. IBLP was established by Bill Gothard. A recent controversy involving its founder Bill Gothard demonstrates why no organization should rely solely on an internal investigation when dealing with matters such as a child sexual abuse and sexual harassment.

According to its mission statement, IBLP “is dedicated to giving individuals, families, churches, schools, communities, governments, and businesses clear instruction and training on how to find success by following God’s principles found in Scripture.” IBLP’s conferences and seminars have been attended by millions of people around the world. Youth conflict resolution is an integral part of IBLP’s ministry, including community outreach, troubled youth mentoring, and ministry training.

Recently IBLP and its 79-year old founder Bill Gothard has been at the center of a sexual harassment controversy. In February 2014, IBLP’s board announced that Bill Gothard has been placed on administrative leave by the board members of his nonprofit organization amid an investigation into allegations that he sexually harassed several women and young girls.

A Christian-run online organization named Recovering Grace has been collecting and publishing victim accounts of sexual abuse by Gothard. According to Recovering Grace, at least 34 different women (including minors) allege they were victims of sexual abuse, “sexual harassment” and emotional abuse by Bill Gothard. The abuse allegedly endured for decades. Religion News Service also reported Gothard was also accused of failing to report allegations of child abuse.

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David Clohessy & Barbara Dorris: Springfield’s new bishop must reach out to clergy abuse victims

MASSACHUSETTS
Daily Hampshire Gazette

By DAVID CLOHESSY
and BARBARA DORRIS
Monday, June 23, 2014

SPRINGFIELD — We take strong issue with comments on abuse made last week by the new head of the Springfield diocese.

For several years, Bishop Thomas Rozanski, previously an auxiliary bishop with the the Archdiocese of Baltimore, Maryland, has served on the Committee on the Protection of Children and Youth overseen by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

That body has been virtually worthless. It has done little or nothing about the absolute bare minimum and has focused far more on public relations than abuse prevention.

Last week, as media in the Valley reported, Bishop Rozanski claimed that being on the panel “has taught me first of all about the importance of reaching out to victims and survivors acknowledging their pain.”

This is disingenuous. Bishops keep pretending that they didn’t “understand” abuse until recently and that their carefully crafted cover-ups were somehow well-intentioned “mistakes” when they were, we believe, deliberate decisions to protect church officials instead of innocent children.

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Italian police disguise themselves as priests to catch blackmailers

ITALY
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 23 Jun 2014

Italian police organised a sting in which they disguised themselves as priests, in order to catch two men who were blackmailing a senior Catholic clergyman over erotic telephone conversations they had taped.

Police officers sprung their trap at the weekend, arresting two Romanian men. The men had been blackmailing the priest for months and demanding €250,000 in return for not handing the taped conversations to the media.

The tapes allegedly recorded Gregorio Vitali, the 70-year-old rector of a church in Vigevano, in the Lombardy region of northern Italy, having an erotic conversation with one of the two men, the Italian press reported.

The priest had allegedly handed over €100,000 euros to the blackmailers in return for their silence but finally called in the police after they demanded an additional €150,000.

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IRELAND’S “MASS GRAVE” HYSTERIA

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Mass hysteria has gripped Ireland, England, and the United States over reports that nearly 800 bodies of children have been found in a mass grave outside a former home run by nuns in Tuam, near Galway. The Catholic Church has been hammered incessantly, and shrill cries of maltreatment abound. Fresh off the heels of horror stories about the Magdalene Laundries, and the torment of Philomena Lee (as recorded in the film, “Philomena”), the public is reeling from the latest report of abuse at the hands of cruel nuns.

None of this is true. There is no mass grave. Women were not abused by nuns in the Magdalene Laundries. And Philomena’s son was never taken from her and then sold to the highest bidder. The evidence that the public has been hosed is overwhelming. Truths, half-truths, and flat-out lies are driving all three stories. That’s a bad stew, the result of which is to whip up anti-Catholic sentiment. This is no accident.

The McAleese Report on the Magdalene Laundries is the most authoritative account of what actually happened in these facilities for “fallen women.” This government report, which was released in February 2013, does not even come close to indicting the nuns—not a single woman was ever sexually assaulted by one of the sisters, and the conditions in the laundries were not “prison like.” We know this because of the records that were examined, the women who were interviewed, and the physicians who offered their testimonials.

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