ABUSE TRACKER

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

January 21, 2015

IA–Victims to bishop: do more about predator priest

IOWA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 21

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

An Iowa man has been deemed too dangerous to be a Catholic priest and has been formally expelled by the Vatican. But no one seems to know where he is. Des Moines’ bishop must do more to protect children from him and warm others about him.

Last summer, Fr. Howard Fitzgerald was suspended – from two parishes and Simpson College – for child sex abuse allegations. Now Catholic officials in Rome have permanently removed him from the priesthood.

Bishop Richard Pates should now hold a news conference to warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about Fitzgerald.

Fitzgerald can’t work as a Catholic priest. But that doesn’t “cure” him of pedophilia. It’s Pates’ duty to do all he can to also protect the safety of non-Catholic kids.

The only decent move would be to warn as many people as possible about Fitzgerald’s crimes. But if for some inexplicable reason Pates can’t bring himself to do that, he should tell the public more about Fitzgerald’s crimes. Because that’s where Fitzgerald is now: among the public, not in a Catholic parish.

It’s irresponsible for bishops to recruit, educate, ordain, hire, train, transfer and protect predators like Fitzgerald and then – when they’re finally exposed – cut them loose on society with little or no warning.

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.

Florham Park priest files defamation lawsuit against accuser

NEW JERSEY
Daily Record

Peggy Wright
January 21, 2015

Instead of forgiving and forgetting, a Catholic priest who was charged with threatening to kill a fellow cleric in Florham Park has filed a defamation lawsuit against his accuser and the Vocationist Fathers, the religious order to which he belongs.

The Rev. Frank P. Hreno, 51, and now living in Whippany, was accepted earlier this month into Morris County’s Pre-Trial Intervention program to resolve a charge of threatening to kill the Rev. Emeka Okwuosa, 37, on April 18 at the Florham Park-based Vocationist Fathers Retreat and Conference Center.

Hreno made no admissions of criminal wrongdoing to be admitted into PTI. If he successfully completes one year of probation supervision and counseling by another priest, the terroristic threat charge will be dismissed and he will not have a criminal record.

Hreno’s lawsuit, made public Wednesday in Superior Court, Morristown, accuses Okwuosa of defamation by allegedly making up a false story that Hreno threatened him and chased him and stabbed him in the arm with a 4-foot crucifix. Hreno only was criminally charged with terroristic threats. Though Okwuosa alleged he was attacked with a cross, authorities did not charge Hreno with that offense.

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

Pope removes Iowa priest accused of abusing minor years ago

IOWA
Houston Chronicle

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Pope Francis has defrocked an Iowa priest who was accused of abusing a minor years ago.

Howard Fitzgerald, who worked at parishes in central and western Iowa over the last 35 years, received notice of the pope’s decision Monday.

Fitzgerald had been placed on indefinite leave in June from his most recent position serving at two Indianola parishes and Simpson College.

A Des Moines Archdiocese review committee found credible evidence that Fitzgerald sexually abused a minor in a “decades-old incident.”

At the victim’s request, church officials have not released information about when and where the abuse occurred.

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

Why Are the Wife and Children More Important Than the Victims?

UNITED STATES
Frum Follies

Bethany Mandel is a victim of Rabbi (sic) Barry Freundel who secretly videotaped her in a state of undress while she was undergoing conversion at the mikveh (ritual bath) under his control. She has now announced that she will not join any lawsuits by other woman who were also videotaped by Freundel.

I always respect the decision of a victim to move on. But that is not how she explains her decision. Even though she is a member the Rabbinical Council of America’s (RCA) committee reviewing conversion practices she declares they are blameless. This makes me wonder if the implicit price of her inclusion was granting the organization absolution for negligent oversight of Freundel and instead focusing on protections in the future. I agree that the future is more important than the past. However, forcing accountability for the past can stimulate future vigilance.

Bethany Mandel also insists that a lawsuit against Freundel himself will victimize his wife and children. She writes:

Unfortunately Barry Freundel’s finances do not exist in a vacuum. He is a member of a family with a wife and three grown children, who are also victims, if not the biggest victims of this entire situation. I have no idea if they are now or will be an intact family in the future, nor is it any of my or anyone else’s business. If they do stay together as a family unit the entire family needs to rebuild their lives. If the family does not stay together, those victims, above all others, deserve to take him to the cleaners first.

Freundel victimized his family. But they are not the ones who were spied on while naked. They are not the ones whose sacred moments were grist for Freundel’s voyeurism.

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.

Jerry Slevin on Pope’s “Three Card Monte” Approach to Birth Control: “Undercuts Many Catholics’ Confidence in Pope Francis’ Intellectual Integrity”

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Jerry Slevin on how the pope’s “disingenuous” remarks on contraception undercut many Catholics’ confidence in his intellectual integrity:

What I infer from Francis’ almost disingenuous remarks on contraception is this. He seems to be saying Catholics can use contraceptives but please do not make him expressly say that Popes Paul VI and Pius XI were wrong on banning birth control. If he were to say that he will, in effect, be saying popes are not infallible. Francis’ slick approach here not only undercuts the “dogma” of infallibility, it also undercuts many Catholics’ confidence in Pope Francis’ intellectual integrity.

Few Catholics will be fooled by Pope Francis, but many are already disappointed at this “three card monte” approach to a very important issue for hundreds of millions of Catholics worldwide. It is not some papal political game for them.

The Catholic church has paid and continues to pay an enormous — an almost unbelievable — price for the decision of its top leaders for some years now to hinge everything in the church on the maintenance of an historically conditioned, entirely mutable clerical system (of which the understanding of an infallible papacy is one component), as if the church exists entirely to serve that system and not be served by it. Many of us had hoped for better from the current pope.

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

Sex Abuse Trial Begins for Former Pastor

NEW YORK
Time Warner Cable News

ALBION, N.Y. — Opening statements were heard Wednesday morning in Orleans County Court in the sexual abuse case involving a former Niagara County Pastor.

There was some emotional testimony Wednesday from two of the alleged victims in the case against Roy Harriger. Both of them gave an account to jurors of what they said happened to them while growing up as children in Lydonville. At the time of the alleged acts, the children were under the age of 10.

Harriger is accused of sexually abusing three young victims between January 2000 and December 2002. He’s charged with sexual conduct against a child and incest.

Harriger was serving as a pastor at Wesleyan Church in Lyndonville at the time. The incidents were reported to have taken place at his home.

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.

Civil Lawsuit Filed Against Priest for Child Sexual Abuse

NEW YORK
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Diocese of Rockville Centre Sued for Hiding Sexual Offenders and Creating a Dangerous Public Nuisance

Identities and Locations of Credibly Accused Sexually Abusive Clerics Sought Alleged Perpetrator Still Allowed to Minister in New York

Complaint – KM v. Diocese of Rockville Centre 1-21-2015
Suffolk County Supreme Court Special Grand Jury Report
Fr. Gregory Yacyshyn Assignments
Fr. Gregory Yacyshyn Photo
Statement of Plaintiff
Plaintiff Photo

What: At a press conference Wednesday, January 21, 2015 on Long Island, attorneys Jeff Anderson and J. Michael Reck of Jeff Anderson & Associates will:

Announce the filing of a complaint on behalf of a 20 year-old woman naming the Diocese of Rockville Centre, St. Francis Assisi Parish and Father Gregory Yacyshyn as defendants. Yacyshyn is alleged to have abused the woman when she was a young child and parishioner at St. Francis of Assisi in Greenlawn, New York. He remains in ministry at St. Jude in Mastic Beach, NY.

Discuss the public nuisance claim alleged in the lawsuit for the Diocese’s failure to implement proper child protection safety measures and for their continued refusal to release the identities and internal church documents on known offenders in spite of previous Grand Jury investigations.

Encourage other sexual abuse survivors to come forward and demand the diocese remove Father Yacyshyn and release the identities and names of known clerical offenders.

Photos and written statement from the survivor will be provided.

WHEN: Wednesday, January 21, 2015 at 1:30PM EST

WHERE: Long Island Marriott
101 James Doolittle Blvd.
Long Island University Room
Uniondale, NY 11553

Notes: Complaint – KM v. Diocese of Rockville Centre 1-21-2015
Copies of the complaint will be available at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact: Jeff Anderson: Cell: 612.817.8665 Office: 651.318.2650
Mike Reck: Cell: 714.742.6593 Office: 646.649.4960

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

Pope names former top prosecutor to head board for clergy abuse appeals

VATICAN CITY
CatholicPhilly

BY CAROL GLATZ
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis named the Vatican’s former chief prosecutor of clerical sex abuse cases to head his new doctrinal team dealing with appeals filed by clergy accused of abuse.

Pope Francis named Auxiliary Bishop Charles J. Scicluna, 55, of Malta to head his new doctrinal team dealing with appeals filed by clergy accused of abuse. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Auxiliary Bishop Charles J. Scicluna, 55, of Malta was appointed president of the new board of review within the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The Vatican announced his appointment as well as the names of the board’s eight other members Jan. 21.

Before being named an auxiliary bishop in Malta in 2012, Bishop Scicluna spent 10 years as promoter of justice at the doctrinal congregation, handling accusations of clerical sex abuse. He said the church must respond to allegations clearly and not react with “inertia, a culture of silence or repression.”

Since being named to Malta, he has continued to troubleshoot for the Vatican. In 2014, he traveled to Geneva to testify before the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child, and in April he traveled to Scotland to collect testimony in a case against Cardinal Keith O’Brien, the former archbishop of St. Andrews and Edinburgh, who resigned in 2013 after admitting to sexual misconduct.

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.

book party for GOD’S BANKERS A History of Money and Power at the Vatican

UNITED STATES
Splash

February 3rd, 2015

The reporting for God’s Bankers began in 2005. It took Posner to long forgotten archives in Europe and South America to uncover a story that the Vatican preferred not be written. The end result is classic investigative reporting about the inner workings of money and power inside the world’s largest religion.

“It is not about faith, belief in God, or questions about the existence of a higher power,” explains Posner. “Instead, it is about how money, accumulating and fighting over it, has been a dominant theme inside the church.”

“A dogged reporter exhaustively pursues the nefarious enrichment of the Vatican, from the Borgias to Pope Francis….A meticulous work that cracks wide open the Vatican’s legendary, enabling secrecy.” – KIRKUS

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.

Tri-State priest challenges conviction in child-sex case

OHIO
WLWT

CINCINNATI (AP) —A Hamilton County priest convicted of taking a 10-year-old boy to West Virginia for sex in 1991 is challenging his conviction and sentence in a federal court.

A priest charged with taking a 10-year-old boy to West Virginia for sex more than two decades ago was found guilty on Friday.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati is hearing arguments Wednesday on Robert Poandl’s appeal.

He was convicted in 2013 of transporting a minor in interstate commerce with the intent of engaging him in sex.

Prosecutors said the suburban Cincinnati priest took the boy to Spencer, W.Va., on Aug. 3, 1991, and raped him there.

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

Rome–Pope ‘tinkers with tail end’ of crisis

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 21

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

Like virtually every other Catholic official, Francis pretends that internal tinkering with church policies will really help prevent abuse. It won’t.

Like virtually every other Catholic official, Francis treats this scandal as an internal matter. It’s not.

And defrocking pedophile priests often protects church assets and bishops’ reputations more than it protects children. (And only a very small percentage of predator priests are ever defrocked.)

Prevention on the front end, not punishment on the back end, should be the priority. First, let’s make sure clerics who commit and conceal abuse are wearing prison uniforms; then let’s address whether they should wear Roman collars.

While making meaningful change in church finances, governance and morale, Francis insist on making nearly meaningless gestures in the abuse and cover up crisis. He refuses to take the single most effective step possible: defrock, demote, discipline or even harshly denounce bishops who conceal child sex crimes. And he refuses to order bishops to

–post predators’ names on their websites,

–give police and prosecutors records about predators, and

–lobby for (not against) better secular child safety laws.

Church panels, procedures, protocols and panels make for great public impression. They provide the patina of progress. But they’re almost always public relations.

We should not confuse motion with reform. We hurt children if we let ineffective moves be portrayed as real change.

Tens of thousands of church officials didn’t hide crimes by tens of thousands of priests against hundreds of thousands of kids because there weren’t enough church panels, procedures, protocols and panels on abuse. Making or tweaking the already plentiful but usually ignored church abuse policies isn’t the answer.

The answer lies largely in external reforms: helping police, prosecutors and lawmakers do their jobs and pursue those who commit and conceal heinous child sex crimes in the church.

Sadly Francis, who shows such courage in many other ways, lacks the courage to break from the timid, self-serving and destructive decades-old patterns of recklessness, callousness and secrecy regarding child molesting clerics and their corrupt, concealing bishops.

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

OH–Convicted serial predator priest wants out of jail

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Jan. 21

Statement by Judy Jones of St. Louis, Assistant Midwest Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 636 433 2511, 314 974 5003, SNAPjudy@gmail.com )

The latest legal moved by a convicted pedophile priest shows why every single person who saw, suspected or suffered child sex crimes must speak up.

Fr. Robert Poandl wants his child sex abuse conviction overturned on technicalities. We hope he fails. And we hope that donations from parishioners are not funding his increasingly expensive legal maneuvers to duck responsibility for his heinous crimes.

There is absolutely no reason why this serial child predator should be given any special treatment. It is public information that he sexually abused at least 3 boys, so he needs to be kept behind bars and away from innocent children.

[Cincinnati.com]

It’s possible he may prevail. (Often, predator priests get top-notch lawyers and exploit loopholes and walk free.) So it’s crucial that others who may have knowledge of or suspicions about Fr. Poandl find the courage to come forward and contact police, no matter how long ago it happened. Your silence only hurts. By speaking up there is a chance for healing, exposing the truth, and therefore protecting others.

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

Nunavut court: Child-molesting ex-priest deserves 25 years jail time, Crown says

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

JIM BELL

To meet the need for retribution, denunciation and general deterrence, child-molester ex-priest Eric Dejaeger should get a 25-year jail sentence, Crown prosecutor Doug Curliss said Jan. 21 in a sentencing submission held at the Nunavut Court of Justice in Iqaluit.

“In virtually every community he was in, he sexually assaulted somebody,” Curliss told Justice Robert Kilpatrick.

Kilpatrick found Dejaeger guilty this past September on 24 counts, mostly sex crimes against Inuit children committed in Igloolik between 1976 and 1982.

He also heard guilty pleas from Dejaeger on eight other charges, some of which involved police complaint first made in the early 1990s.

After two days of harrowing victim impact statements from Inuit adults who Dejaeger sexually abused and assaulted as children, Kilpatrick began hearing sentencing submissions from lawyers.

Curliss said there Dejaeger’s case presents numerous aggravating factors and no mitigating factors.

And that means that — within the constraints posed by case law and sentencing principles set out in the Criminal Code — the court should impose the highest possible sentence, Curliss 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.

Eric Dejaeger sentencing: Crown asks for 25 years, minus time served

CANADA
CBC News

Crown prosecutor Doug Curliss is asking for a sentence of 25 years for Eric Dejaeger’s crimes, minus the time the former Oblate priest has already served.

In an Iqaluit courtroom Wednesday morning, Curliss said Dejaeger sexually assaulted kids in “virtually every community he was in” and “discredited his calling…and victimized those he should have protected.”

Dejaeger, 67, was convicted last year on 32 counts of child sexual abuse dating back to his time as a priest in Igloolik, Nunavut, between 1978 and 1982.

Curliss listed each of Dejaeger’s 32 offences and asked for consecutive sentences, ranging from 9 months to 8 years, for each. While his proposed sentence added up to 79.5 years, Curliss told the court that by applying the principle of totality, “a combined sentence should not be unduly long or harsh.” He said a sentence of 25 years would be appropriate.

Dejaeger has been in jail since January 2011. His time served to date adds up to 4 years. With a credit of two days for every day served, that would mean Curliss is asking for another 17 years in jail.

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.

Diocese Releases More Names Of Priests Accused Of Sexual Abuse

ARIZONA/NEW MEXICO
AZ Journal

Jan. 21, 2015

By Linda Kor

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup has released the names of 31 priests church officials say have sexually abused their parishioners. The diocese, which serves 55,000 square miles in Arizona and New Mexico, including tribal lands, posted the names on its website last month.

A story published in The Tribune-News in 2011 reported on the admission by the diocese that a now deceased priest who had served in both Winslow and Holbrook had been a known pedophile within the church. Clement Hageman served as a priest at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Holbrook from 1942 until 1953 and at the Madre de Dios Parish in Winslow from 1965 until 1975. That admission by the diocese allowed individuals who suffered abuse by Hageman to come forward to begin healing and to pursue legal options.

Last month the diocese released the names of 30 more priests who served in the diocese who have been identified as having credible allegations of sexual misconduct made against them. Although many of those priests are now deceased, the diocese has not indicated the status of those who are still living. Of the clergy included on that list, nine served in Holbrook, 14 in Winslow and one in Snowflake.

Those priests who were assigned to Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in Holbrook include Clement Hageman, who was assigned from 1942-1952, and is now deceased; William Allison, assigned in 1958, now deceased; David Enrique Viramontes, assigned from 1960 to 1961, now deceased; Samuel Wilson, assigned in 1961, now deceased; James Burns, assigned in 1964, now deceased; Douglas McNeil, assigned from 1969-1971 and again from 1973-1974; John Boland, assigned in 1975; Joseph Coutu, assigned from 1981-1983; and Jose Rodriquez, assigned from 1990-1992. …

David Clohessy, executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), knows the struggle that victims go through as old memories surface and emphasized the importance of reaching out to others. “I am begging every single person who suspects they observed or experienced abuse to come forward. Contact the police and help protect others who may become victims,” said Clohessy.

He explained the importance of reporting the crime, not only to law enforcement first, but also to an independent source. “These crimes were committed and concealed because it was not in the best interest of the church to expose them until now. You cannot tell me that over the past years in Arizona that with hundreds and hundreds of church employees no one, not a priest to a janitor, saw that abuse was taking place. It is counterintuitive to go to the diocese first,” stated Clohessy.

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.

Who Is Bishop Charles Scicluna? Pope Appoints Former Sex Crimes Prosecutor To Lead New Panel

VATICAN CITY
International Business Times

By Zoe Mintz

Bishop Charles Scicluna, the Vatican’s former sex crimes prosecutor, has been appointed to lead the panel that will hear appeals by priests who have been accused of abusing minors, the Holy See announced Wednesday. The decision was made by Pope Francis two months after he announced the creation of a judicial body that will handle sexual abuse crimes.

Scicluna, an auxiliary bishop in Malta, was the church’s lead prosecutor for sex crimes between 2002 and 2012. He was appointed to the position a year after Pope Benedict XVI (then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger) passed legislation requiring all bishops to send abuse allegations to his office before taking any action. Ratzinger intervened in this process after he realized bishops were moving accused priests from parish to parish to avoid prosecution, the Associated Press reported.

While Scicluna rarely spoke publicly about his role, he was regarded as a hard-liner against clergy sexual abuse and cover-ups.

“Scicluna did a remarkable job,” Juan Vaca, a former priest, told the AP in 2012. He was the first abuse victim Scicluna interviewed during the delayed investigation of the Rev. Marcial Maciel, the late founder of the Legion of Christ religious order who abused boys, maintained relationships with two women and fathered six children, two of whom he abused. In the years after Maciel’s condemnation, “[Scicluna] continued to prosecute other similar cases with the same integrity,” Vaca said. …

Still, even with Scicluna’s latest appointment, victims’ groups say more needs to be done to punish abusive priests.

“We should not confuse motion with reform,” Barbara Dorris, outreach director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, said in a statement Wednesday. “Like virtually every other Catholic official, Francis pretends that internal tinkering with church policies will really help prevent abuse. It won’t.”

The group, which is the largest self-help organization for victims of clergy sexual abuse, urges the Catholic Church to defrock, demote and publicly discipline abusive priests and bishops who conceal sex crimes.

Since Francis was elected in March 2013, he has remained relatively silent on the topic. He began making statements last May when he met with sex abuse victims and called the allegations an “ugly crime” akin to performing “a satanic Mass.” A month later, Polish Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski was defrocked after a Vatican tribunal found him guilty of sexually abusing minors. During a homily given in July, Francis called for “zero tolerance” of sex abuse by clergy and met with six more victims.

“Church panels, procedures, protocols and panels make for great public impression. They provide the patina of progress,” Dorris said referring to the panel the pope established in November that will advise the Vatican on child protection policies. They will meet for the first time at the Vatican on Feb. 6-8. “But they’re almost always public relations.”

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.

We Need a Mikveh Revolution

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Daily Forward

By Dov Linzer
Published January 21, 2015

Recent events have forced us as a community to take a hard look at the practice of having female converts immerse themselves in a mikveh before a rabbinical court of three men. In the wake of news that a Washington rabbi, Barry Freundel, allegedly spied on women as they were engaging in this ritual, others have described their own troubling and, at times, traumatic experiences at the mikveh.

It is the moment to ask some fundamental questions about how we treat converts. Some are questions of Jewish Law, such as whether it still makes sense for women to immerse themselves in the presence of a beit din, or rabbinical court. But there are other bigger issues to consider about how this ritual is conducted.

During the conversion process, the prospective converts are judged in regard to their sincerity and whether they have satisfied the criteria that a beit din has laid out. All this is necessary, but it is also disempowering, particularly when this difficult stage continues for a protracted period of time. What’s more, this can be an invitation for exploitation and abuse. It is our obligation to fix this situation.

One response to the concern of abuse has been the appointment of an ombudsman to oversee conversions done under an organization’s aegis, and to whom a potential convert can turn to when troubling circumstances arise. This is a good technical fix, but it misses the point that more fundamental changes are needed.

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.

Decision to canonize Father Junipero Serra draws divided reaction

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

By JOE MOZINGO, MATT HAMILTON AND JEFF GOTTLIEB

He wandered beyond the edge of Christendom into a rugged land of “infidels” he sought to convert.

When Father Junipero Serra and his cavalcade arrived at la bahia de San Diego in 1769, between 225,000 and 310,000 natives inhabited the territory that would become the state of California. The string of missions he and his Franciscan order established would become an origin story for the state, a folkloric tale of vineyards and benevolent friars, taught to students from Modoc to San Ysidro.

Reality was much harsher. The Spanish flogged natives who disobeyed, banned their beliefs and customs, captured those who tried to escape. In the end, they converted less than a quarter of the population, while their livestock and disease destroyed native food supplies and decimated villages. …

Some say there is nothing wrong with highlighting the dark side of Serra’s legacy.

“During the Spanish colonial and the Mexican period we lost 90% of the Indians in California,” said Ron Andrade, director of Los Angeles City/County Native American Indian Commission. “Serra was no saint to us.”

Others such as Ruben Mendoza, coordinator of California mission archaeology at Cal State Monterey Bay, say the canonization is long overdue.

“I’ve always felt the canonization process was stymied through misinformation and politicization, and laying blame and onus on one individual who was actually in constant conflict with governors and military commanders in New Spain over how they were treating Indians,” Mendoza 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.

DÁIL BEGINS MOTHER-AND-BABY HOMES INQUIRY PROCESS

IRELAND
Laois Nationalist

The Dáil has started the process of formally establishing the inquiry into mother-and-baby homes.

The motion once passed by the Oireachtas will allow the Taoiseach Enda Kenny to sign an order for the Commission of Investigation to get underway.

It is expected to take three years to complete as it will be looking at mother-and-baby homes from the foundation of the State in 1922, all the way to 1998.

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

Pope Names Austin, Texas Vicar General Garcia Auxiliary Bishop Of Austin Diocese

WASHINGTON (DC)
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

January 21, 2015
WASHINGTON—Pope Francis has named Father Daniel E. Garcia, a priest of the Diocese of Austin, Texas, auxiliary bishop of Austin. Father Garcia, 54, is currently the vicar general of the diocese and moderator of the curia.

The appointment was publicized in Washington, January 21, by Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

Daniel Elias Garcia was born in Cameron, Texas, in 1960. He earned an associate of arts degree from the Tyler Junior College in Tyler, Texas (1982) and a bachelor’s degree in philosophy (1984) and a master of divinity (1988) from St. Mary’s Seminary at the University of St. Thomas in Houston. He was ordained to the priesthood on May 28, 1988.

Following ordination, his pastoral assignments included parochial vicar of St. Catherine of Sienna Parish (1988-1990), Cristo Rey Church (1990-1991) and St. Louis Parish (1991-1992), all in Austin; parochial vicar of St. Mary Magdalene Parish in Humble, Texas (1992-1995); and pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Parish in Austin (1995-2014).

His responsibilities for the Diocese of Austin have included master of ceremonies for the bishop, member of the vocation team, vocation director, member of the diocesan liturgical committee, member of the diaconal advisory committee and chair of the pastoral practices committee of the presbyteral council. He served as dean of the Austin North Deanery, a member of the interim presbyteral council and presbyteral council, and a member of the college of consultors.

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.

Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 21 January 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– the following members of the College for the review of appeals to the Ordinary Session of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, instituted by the Rescriptum ex Audientia SS.mi of 3 November 2014:

President: Bishop Charles J. Scicluna, auxiliary of Malta;

Members: Cardinal Zenon Grocholewski, prefect of the Congregation for Catholic Education; Cardinal Attilio Nicora, president emeritus of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Holy See (APSA) and the Financial Information Authority (AIF); Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio, president of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts; Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, president of the Prefecture of the Economic Affairs of the Holy See; Archbishop Jose Luis Mollaghan, emeritus of Rosario, Argentina; and Bishop Juan Ignacio Arrieta Ochoa de Chinchetru, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts;

Supplementary members: Cardinal Julian Herranz, president emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts; Bishop Giorgio Corbellini, president of the Labour Office of the Apostolic See and of the Disciplinary Commission of the Roman Curia.

-Rev. Fr. Daniel Elias Garcia as auxiliary of Austin (area 57,424, population 2,902,992, Catholics 536,183, priests 218, permanent deacons 207, religious 201), U.S.A. The bishop-elect was born in Cameron, Texas, U.S.A. in 1960 and was ordained a priest in 1988. He holds a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, a Master of Divinity from the University of St. Thomas, Houston, Texas, and a Master’s degree in liturgical studies from St. John’s University, Collegeville, Minnesota. He has served in a number of pastoral roles, including parish priest of the “St. Vincent de Paul” parish in Austin and dean of the “Austin North Deanery”. He is currently a member of the presbyteral council, diocesan consultor, member of the Priests’ Personnel Board, and vicar general and moderator of the Curia.

– confirmed the appointment by Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin of Dr. Tommaso Di Ruzza as director of the Financial Information Authority (AIF). Dr. Di Ruzza is currently “ad interim” deputy director of the same institution.

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

Pope Francis appoints Bishop Scicluna to head new Vatican abuse committee

VATICAN CITY
The Tablet

21 January 2015 by Liz Dodd

Pope Francis has appointed the Vatican’s former chief prosecutor, Bishop Charles Scicluna, as the head of a new body to handle appeals by priests accused of abuse.

The seven-member body, which Pope Francis created in November, will work under the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) and will judge cases involving the sexual abuse of minors and abuses involving the Sacrament of Confession.

Other members include Cardinals Zenon Grocholewski, Attilio Nicora, Francesco Coccopalmerio and Giuseppe Versaldi; and Archbishop José Luis Mollaghan and Bishop Juan Ignacio Arrieta Ochoa de Chinchetru.

Bishop Sciclua, currently apostolic administrator of the archdiocese of Malta, served as Promoter of Justice at the CDF under Pope Benedict XVI. The Maltese bishop has been credited with instituting major reforms within the CDF to better report and deal with abuse allegations.

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

I-Team: Rabbi arrested, accused of sexually abusing a minor

OHIO
Fox 8

[with video]

JANUARY 20, 2015, BY JACK SHEA

FOX 8 I-Team reporter Jack Shea has learned that a well-known Cleveland rabbi was arrested out of state on allegations that he sexually abused a minor.

Rabbi Frederick Karp is the spiritual living director at the Menorah Park Center for Senior Living in Beachwood, and president of the Association of Jewish Chaplains. He is the focus of a criminal investigation in Maryland.

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.

Statement Regarding Rev. Paul Moudry

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

01/20/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

This was posted on the website of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis earlier today:

Rev. Paul Moudry has resigned as pastor of the Church of Saint Margaret Mary in Golden Valley. Rev. Moudry has been on a voluntary leave of absence from priestly ministry since November 2013. Over the past year, Rev. Moudry has cooperated with the Archdiocese and the Ministerial Standards Board in a comprehensive review of prior misconduct (with adults in non-illegal activities) from many years ago.

Archbishop John Nienstedt accepted Rev. Moudry’s offer to resign as pastor of Saint Margaret Mary. Rev. Moudry will continue his voluntary leave of absence and has participated in making appropriate disclosure to his parishioners and trustees.

No additional information has been provided. When Father Moudry’s leave was announced in November of 2013 it was stated that he would not engage in any public ministry while on leave. It is unclear whether this agreement remains in place, and it is also unclear how the Archdiocese will provide for his ongoing support.

The other priest who took voluntary leave at the same time as Father Moudry, Father David Barrett, was returned to ministry in 2014 after a very strange and limited disclosure to his parish. I am not sure to which parishioners and trustees Father Moudry has made disclosures given that the announcement states he has resigned his pastorate.

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 pleads guilty re offences in western Sydney parishes

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites Australia researcher (article updated 20 January 2015)

A former Catholic priest of the Sydney archdiocese, Father Robert Flaherty, now aged 71, has pleaded guilty regarding sexual offences against two children dating back to the 1970s.

In 2013, Flaherty was charged regarding three boys. Court documents stated that the alleged victims, who were boys aged between 11 and 15, lived in parishes in which Father Flaherty worked in western Sydney. The offences were alleged to have occurred between 1971 and 1982 in western Sydney or during visits to a holiday house in the Shoalhaven area, south of Sydney.

The three alleged victims, now in their 50s, were each members of Father Flaherty’s former parishes at Blacktown, St Marys and Richmond (all to the west of Sydney).

In 2014, Flaherty appeared in Parramatta District Court (with Judge Colesax). He pleaded guilty regarding two of the boys (one incident per boy) and he will be sentenced regarding these two on a later date.

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.

Marist Brother Luke Leslie Saker in court on sex-assault charges

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

Marist Brother Leslie Garfield Saker, 74, whose religious name in the Marist order is Brother Luke Saker, was charged by police in a Sydney court on 20 January 2015 with sexual offences allegedly committed against a 16-year-old schoolboy in 1974. The boy was a student at a Catholic school in Auburn in Sydney’s west.

The Saker case had its first mention on 20 January 2015 with a magistrate in Sydney’s Burwood Local Court. This was a brief administrative procedure for the charges to be officially filed in court. On display in the Burwood court-house on that day was a list of 192 cases which were scheduled for a court mention that day (in several court-rooms), and Leslie Garfield Saker was included on the list.

Brother Saker has not yet been required to indicate how he will plead in answer to the charges.

The Saker case will come up again in the Burwood court in late February 2015 for a further mention to consider the subsequent steps in the judicial process. The main proceedings would be held on a later date.

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 challenges conviction in child-sex case

OHIO
Cincinnati.com

CINCINNATI — An Ohio priest convicted of taking a 10-year-old boy to West Virginia for sex in 1991 is challenging his conviction and sentence in a federal court in Southwest Ohio.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati is hearing arguments Wednesday on Robert Poandl’s (POHN’-duhl) appeal. He was convicted in 2013 of transporting a minor in interstate commerce with the intent of engaging him in sex.

Prosecutors said the suburban Cincinnati priest took the boy to Spencer, W.Va., on Aug. 3, 1991, and raped him there.

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

Longtime Vatican sex crimes prosecutor to head new appeals board to speed up decisions

VATICAN CITY
Fox News

Published January 21, 2015

Associated Press

VATICAN CITY – The Vatican’s long-time sex abuse prosecutor has been named to head up a new Vatican board to hear appeals by priests accused of molesting minors.

Bishop Charles Scicluna, currently an auxiliary bishop in his native Malta, will head the panel, which also includes some of the Vatican’s most senior and seasoned canon lawyers.

Pope Francis in November announced the creation of the panel to speed up the Vatican’s review of appeals of priests sanctioned for abuse. In recent years, the Vatican has been receiving on average 400-500 accusations a year, significantly increasing the caseload of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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

Pope appoints Scicluna as Vatican college president

MALTA
Malta Today

Tim Diacono 21 January 2015

Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Charles Scicluna as the President of a college within the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Scicluna has been serving as Apostolic Administrator since the resignation of Archbishop Paul Cremona. It as yet unknown whether this recent appointment means that Scicluna will not be able to become Malta’s next Archbishop.

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.

Updated: Vatican appointment for Mgr Scicluna ‘compatible with any kind of role in Malta’

MALTA
Malta Independent

The Vatican today announced that Apostolic Administrator Charles Scicluna has been appointed to head a Vatican college within the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith to examine appeals to the ordinary session of the Congregation.

The members of the College of which Bishop Scicluna is the President are made up of four cardinals and two bishops with a cardinal and a bishop as substitutes.

Bishop Scicluna was named Apostolic Administrator after the resignation of Mgr Paul Cremona from the post of Archbishop, and he was seen among the favourites to be named as head of the Maltese archdiocese.

Contacted by The Malta Independent, Mgr Scicluna said that the role he has been given in Rome is compatible with any role that he holds or may hold in Malta, including possibly that of Archbishop.

He said that the appointment given means that he will need to fly to Rome once a month to lead the college and it will not impinge on his duties here.

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.

Nomina …

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Bolletino

Nomina dei Membri del Collegio per l’esame dei ricorsi alla Sessione Ordinaria presso la Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede

Con il Rescriptum ex Audientia SS.mi del 3 Novembre 2014, prot. N.62.411, il Santo Padre ha istituito presso la Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede uno speciale Collegio per l’esame dei ricorsi alla Sessione Ordinaria del medesimo Dicastero.

Detto Collegio risulta composto dai seguenti Membri:

Presidente:

S.E. Mons. Charles J. Scicluna, Vescovo tit. di San Leone, Ausiliare di Malta.

Membri:

Em.mo Card. Zenon Grocholewski, Prefetto della Congregazione per l’Educazione Cattolica;

Em.mo Card. Attilio Nicora, Legato Pontificio per le Basiliche di San Francesco e di Santa Maria degli Angeli in Assisi, Presidente emerito dell’Amministrazione del Patrimonio della Sede Apostolica e dell’Autorità di Informazione Finanziaria;

Em.mo Card. Francesco Coccopalmerio, Presidente del Pontificio Consiglio per i Testi Legislativi;

Em.mo Card. Giuseppe Versaldi, Presidente della Prefettura degli Affari Economici della Santa Sede;

S.E. Mons. José Luis Mollaghan, Arcivescovo emerito di Rosario;

S.E. Mons. Juan Ignacio Arrieta Ochoa de Chinchetru, Vescovo tit. di Civitate, Segretario del Pontificio Consiglio per i Testi Legislativi.

Membri supplenti:

Em.mo Card. Julián Herranz, Presidente emerito del Pontificio Consiglio per i Testi Legislativi;

S.E. Mons. Giorgio Corbellini, Vescovo tit. di Abula, Presidente dell’Ufficio del Lavoro della Sede Apostolica e della Commissione Disciplinare della Curia Romana.

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

Pope names members of new body that will judge abuse cases

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

Catholic World News – January 21, 2015

Pope Francis has named the members of a new body of cardinals and bishops who, under the auspices of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), will judge cases involving the sexual abuse of minors and serious abuses associated with the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

The Pope created the seven-member body in November but did not name members at that time.

Bishop Charles Scicluna, the Vatican’s former top abuse prosecutor, has been named president of the body. He continues in his duties as an auxiliary bishop in his native Malta.

Other members are Cardinal Zenon Grocholewski, Cardinal Attilio Nicora, Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio, Cardinal Giuseppe Versaldi, Archbishop José Luis Mollaghan, and Bishop Juan Ignacio Arrieta Ochoa de Chinchetru. Archbishop Mollaghan is an Argentine bishop emeritus; the other members serve on the body concurrent with their other responsibilities.

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.

Erste Bilanz nach Missbrauchsskandal

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Rundschau

[Five years after the discovery of the abuse scandal in the German Catholic Church several of the 27 dioceses have accounted for their education and prevention work.]

Teile der Katholischen Kirche legen ihre Berichte zur Aufklärungs- und Präventionsarbeit vor. Neben der Aufarbeitung der Fälle von sexuellem Missbrauch ist auch die Prävention ein wichtiges Thema.

Fünf Jahre nach Aufdeckung des Missbrauchsskandals in der katholischen Kirche Deutschlands haben mehrere der 27 Bistümer ihre Aufklärungs- und Präventionsarbeit bilanziert. „Wir können unter dieses Thema keinen Schlussstrich ziehen“, sagte der Missbrauchsbeauftragte der Bischofskonferenz, Stephan Ackermann, bei der Vorlage der Zahlen für sein Bistum Trier, zu dem 1,4 Millionen Katholiken gehören.

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.

Missbrauch in der Katholischen Kirche

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[A chronology of abuse in the Catholic church.]

Vor fünf Jahren wurde der Skandal um sexuellen Missbrauch und körperlicher Gewalt in der römisch-katholischen Kirche in Deutschland bekannt. Eine Chronologie von erschütternden Fällen, die zum Teil erst nach Jahrzehnten bekannt wurden.

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.

Missbrauchs-Bericht der katholischen Kirche veröffentlicht

DEUTSCHLAND
HPD

[The Berling archdiocese yesterday presented an interim report regarding suspected cases of sexual abuse. The archdiocese received 31 reports of sexual abuse of minors.]

Von Frank Nicolai

20. JAN 2015

BERLIN. (hpd) Gestern hat das katholische Erzbistum Berlin einen Zwischenbericht zu Verdachtsfällen sexuellen Missbrauchs vorgelegt. Danach gab es 31 Anzeigen wegen sexuellem Missbrauch an Minderjährigen im Erzbistum Berlin.

Der gestern veröffentlichte “Zwischenbericht Verdachtsfälle sexuellen Missbrauchs an Minderjährigen und erwachsenen Schutzbefohlenen durch Kleriker, Ordensangehörige oder andere Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeiter im kirchlichen Dienst” führt auf, dass bis zum 31. Dezember 2014 im Erzbistum Berlin insgesamt 31 Kleriker, darunter vom Erzbischof beauftragte Ordensangehörige sowie Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeiter im kirchlichen Dienst, des sexuellen Missbrauchs an Minderjährigen und erwachsenen Schutzbefohlenen beschuldigt wurden.

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.

Bistum Trier: 67 Priester des sexuellen Missbrauchs beschuldigt

DEUTSCHLAND
BRF

[Diocese of Trier: 67 priests accused of sexual abuse]

Die Aufarbeitung der Missbrauchsfälle im Bistum Trier kommt voran. Triers Bischof Stephan Ackermann sagte, für die katholische Kirche seien die letzten fünf Jahre ein schmerzhafter Lernprozess gewesen. Man habe im Bistum Opfer sexuellen Missbrauchs dazu aufgefordert, sich zu melden. 114 Menschen hätten sich daraufhin gemeldet, 67 Priester seien des sexuellen Missbrauchs beschuldigt worden. 83 der Opfer bekamen jeweils bis zu 5.000 Euro Entschädigung, in Härtefällen auch mehr.

Die beschuldigten Priester waren teils schon gestorben, gegen andere wurden kircheninterne Verfahren eröffnet. Bei den meisten Beschuldigten habe sich der Missbrauchsverdacht bestätigt, so Ackermann. Sie wurden entweder aus dem Klerikerstand entlassen oder dürfen nicht mehr als Pfarrer arbeiten. Derzeit wird im Bistum Trier noch gegen neun Priester intern ermittelt.

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.

Missbrauchsopfer soll Steuerschuld zahlen

DEUTSCHLAND
Sueddeutsche

[Interview with Georg Auer, who was abused as a student with the Regensberg cathedral choir. He is still waiting for an acknowledgment of his suffering on part of the church.]

Von Wolfgang Wittl, Regensburg

Trotz aller seelischen Belastung, die er mit sich herumträgt: Seinen Humor hat Georg Auer offenbar nicht verloren. Im Januar 2013 ist der frühere Domspatz aus der Kirche ausgetreten, am vergangenen Samstag hat er vom katholischen Kirchensteueramt Regensburg einen Brief erhalten. Darin wird er aufgefordert, eine Steuerschuld von 7,27 Euro zu begleichen. “Ist dieses Schreiben gar der ,erneute Versuch’ des Bistums, mit mir wieder in Kontakt zu kommen?”, fragt Auer.

Der 63-Jährige ist einer der drei Männer, die in der ARD-Dokumentation “Sünden an den Sängerknaben” schilderten, wie sie als Schüler der Domspatzen missbraucht worden seien und bis heute, Jahrzehnte später, auf eine Anerkennung ihres Leids seitens der Kirche warteten. Das Bistum Regensburg reagierte auf den Beitrag mit einer Erklärung, man wolle Auers Fall neu aufrollen. Der vom Bistum beauftragte Rechtsanwalt habe in dem ARD-Film neue, vom Opfer erhobene Vorwürfe entdeckt, die der Diözese so nicht bekannt gewesen seien. Der Anwalt habe deshalb empfohlen, das Gespräch mit Auer zu suchen. Zu den weiteren beiden mutmaßlichen Opfern gab es keine Stellungnahme.

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.

Clergy sex abuse and “the silence of the many”

UNITED STATES
Stop Baptist Predators

Christa Brown

“True evil lies not in the depraved act of the one, but in the silence of the many.”
— Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Hello to all of you!

It’s been a long time since I visited my blog, but today is Martin Luther King Day and I found myself reconnecting with a column I wrote for MLK day in 2013. It was previously picked up and published by the Associated Baptist Press — now known as Baptist News Global — which by the way is not affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention. I think this may just be the best job I ever managed to do in succinctly summarizing the complex issues at work in the problem of Baptist clergy sex abuse and denominational complicity. An excerpt:

“In countless stories of Baptist clergy sex abuse, we have seen the sad truth of King’s words made manifest. Even with childhood histories of horrific abuse – of having been molested, raped and sodomized by Baptist preachers – countless such victims have said that the worst of their experience came when they tried to tell about the abuse within the faith community.

That was when they faced ‘the silence of the many.’

That was when the relational fabric of community, and often even of family, was torn asunder.

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.

Fears over scope of mother and baby home probe

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

Adoption campaigners have again expressed concerns that tens of thousands of people could be excluded from the mother and baby home inquiry.

Ahead of a Dáil debate on the terms of reference for the inquiry today, the Adoption Rights Alliance expressed fears that the investigation will be limited to only the practices and procedures of institutions, adoption agencies and individuals with a direct connection to a mother and baby home.

The group said that if the scope of the inquiry was not widened, tens of thousands of mothers who gave birth in State and private maternity homes but suffered the same fate of forced and illegal adoptions as those born in mother and baby homes would be excluded.

Under terms of reference, the inquiry will investigate how unmarried mothers and their babies were treated between 1922 and 1998 at 14 State-linked religious institutions.

The three-year inquiry — which has a €23.5m budget and may cost millions more in redress — will examine mother and baby homes, county homes, vaccine trials on children, and illegal adoptions where babies were trafficked abroad.

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.

MEDIA RELEASE

MASSACHUSETTS
Road to Recovery

TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 2015

A Catholic religious order of priests and brothers, known as the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts, and the Diocese of Fall River, MA, enabled the sexual abuse of at least two minor boys from Massachusetts by one of its members, Fr. James R. Nickel, SS.CC., in Fairhaven, MA, and West Harwich, MA, respectively

Two men have filed lawsuits in Superior Court, Bristol County, MA, alleging sexual abuse by Fr. James Nickel, SS.CC., and alleging negligent supervision by leaders of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts; Bishop Daniel Cronin, retired bishop of Fall River, MA; and others

What
A demonstration and leafleting alerting the media, parishioners, and the general public of the filing of two Superior Court lawsuits in Massachusetts against former Bishop Daniel Cronin of the Diocese of Fall River and leaders/supervisors of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts religious order (copies of the lawsuits will be provided)

When
Wednesday, January 21, 2015 from 11:00 am until 12:30 pm

Where
On the public sidewalk outside the headquarters of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts religious order, 77 Adams Street, Fairhaven, MA (near St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Parish run by the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts)

Who
Dr. Robert M. Hoatson, Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families.

Why
Two men have come forward to report that they had been sexually abused by Fr. James R. Nickel, a priest of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts religious order, when they were minor boys in Fairhaven, MA, and West Harwich, MA, respectively. The Congregation of the Sacred Hearts religious order administers at least two parishes in Fairhaven, MA (St. Joseph’s and St. Mary’s), and were in charge at one time of Holy Trinity Parish in West Harwich, MA, on Cape Cod. Fr. James R. Nickel, SS.CC. worked within the geographic boundaries of the Diocese of Fall River with the permission of Bishop Daniel Cronin at the time of the sexual abuse of the children. One plaintiff as a minor was sexually abused by Fr. James R. Nickel from approximately 1972-1974 when he was approximately 13-14 years of age at Holy Trinity Parish in West Harwich, MA. Another plaintiff as a minor was sexually abused from approximately 1983-1986 when he was approximately 12-14 years of age at St. Mary’s Parish in Fairhaven, MA. Both boys suffered serious injuries from the sexual abuse. Demonstrators will call on the Diocese of Fall River and the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts to help these men heal and give them the resources they need to recover.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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

Child abuse inquiry struggles to get off ground

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

By Tom Symonds
Home affairs correspondent, BBC News

The inquiry into historical child abuse is likely to be the longest and most complex ever.

But right from the start there have been arguments about who should take on the task of delving into Britain’s darkest secrets, and how they should go about it.

When on 7 July 2014, Theresa May announced there would be a public inquiry into child abuse, she may have been excused for thinking an important item had been ticked off the governmental to-do list.

She had little alternative.

Since the Jimmy Savile scandal it has been clear that many men and women abused as children are no longer prepared to endure the silence that has hung over this issue for decades.

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.

Westminster child abuse inquiry to hear Margaret Thatcher was presented ‘allegations …

UNITED KINGDOM
The Independent

Westminster child abuse inquiry to hear Margaret Thatcher was presented ‘allegations of unnatural sexual proclivities’

ADAM WITHNALL Wednesday 21 January 2015

A UK academic has uncovered a file which he claims could contain allegations of “unnatural” sexual activities against public figures at the height of the Westminster child abuse scandal.

Dr Chris Murphy, a security and intelligence lecturer at the University of Salford, found the classified document while searching the National Archives in Kew.

While its contents have not been made public, Dr Murphy said he was immediately alerted by the title showing it had been taken to the then-Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher.

The title read: “PREM19/588 – SECURITY. Allegations against former public [word missing] of unnatural sexual proclivities; security aspects 1980 Oct 27 – 1981 Mar 20.”

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.

Archdiocese bankruptcy: Some issues going forward

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: FRED ZIMMERMAN Updated: January 20, 2015

Actions were needed, but goodwill missions will be constrained and employers will face uncertainties about their liabilities.

Well, our archdiocese is bankrupt. Possibly deserved, but still a sad event. None of us can tolerate sexual impropriety. But bankruptcy means that missions will be constrained; parishes in poorer areas will have less support; schools will be reduced in number, and good, well-meaning and conscientious dedicated people will be affected.

Minnesota’s Child Victims Act, which removes the civil statute of limitations for sexual abuse allegations, was passed by the Legislature in 2013. No doubt there was widespread concern about the matter of sexual abuse, as there should be. However, some of us do wonder if the Legislature fully comprehended what would happen when the act was passed. Other institutions and members of the business community might well wonder if the curtailment of the statute of limitations might be extended to other arenas.

The cases involving the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis are old. The 64 accused priests and brothers were born an average of 81 years ago. Of these, 79.7 percent were removed from ministry an average of 20 years ago. Forty-seven percent of the accused have died. Settlements were made or attempted with the people affected — a process perhaps delayed and made complicated by the threatened and filed lawsuits. Settlements are needed, of course, and many were offered and accepted.

In this modern age, few of us are able to go through life without some exposure to sexual impropriety that makes us sick. These cases involve a wide spectrum of vocations and personalities. Despicable as they are, the cases are not simple. I have dealt with several in my years in industry and during my several decades as a corporate director. The cases take time and are often confusing. The arduous task of finding the exact facts is neither quick nor simple. People have to be interviewed — and qualified. Qualified and willing witnesses able to provide credible evidence must be found, and their statements must be verified. Unfortunately, what is ultimately proven is not always immediately proven.

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

Ex-youth pastor pleads guilty to sexual battery

OREGON
Argus Observer

PAYETTE — A former youth pastor has been sentenced to prison after pleading guilty to sexual battery.
Forest Rueben Gibson, 34, was a youth pastor in Canyon County when a teenage girl there made allegations against him. While investigating her claims, Canyon County Sheriff’s Detective Shawn Becker heard from a second victim in Payette County.

Gibson met the second girl at church camp, according to information from Barbara “Bobbi” Richart, chief deputy prosecuting attorney in Payette County. Gibson pleaded guilty to sexual battery against that girl — who, because she is a minor, is not being named — in District Court Jan. 9.

The battery took place on or about Feb. 23 through April 8, 2014, according to court documents. Gibson was arrested April 28.

At his sentencing, the first victim addressed the court and Gibson, Richart said. The girls said that because of his position with the church, she had trusted him.

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

Trial setting for former pastor delayed by Moniteau Co. prosecutor’s own troubles

MISSOURI
Lake News Online

Posted Jan. 20, 2015

Morgan County

A trial setting for a California, Mo. man charged with multiple felonies related to alleged sexual relations with two underage girls has been rescheduled.

Travis Smith was formerly a pastor at a church in Stover.

He is facing charges of forcible sodomy, forcible rape, sexual abuse, statutory sodomy and three counts of second degree statutory rape in Moniteau County, stemming from alleged incidents in 1998, 1999 and 2005.

Judge Kenneth Hayden will now preside over the trial setting hearing on March 13, 2015 instead of the original date of Jan. 16, 2015 after Moniteau County Prosecuting Attorney Shayne Healea made a motion to appoint a special prosecutor to the case.

Healea is facing his own troubles after being indicted Nov. 21 on charges related to an alleged drunk driving accident in Columbia in October.

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.

Clearwater County pastor charged with sexual misconduct with minors

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Crystal Dey
Forum News Service
POSTED: 01/20/2015

BAGLEY, Minn. — A Lutheran pastor in Clearwater County is charged with 16 counts of felony criminal sexual conduct for acts that allegedly occurred between 2009 and 2014 with juvenile boys.

Scott Morey, 42, of Shevlin appeared in Clearwater County District Court in Bagley in far northwestern Minnesota on Friday facing eight first-degree, three second-degree, two third-degree and three fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct charges.

Morey had been a pastor at Calvary Lutheran Church in Winger, Immanuel Lutheran Church in Bejou and Our Savior’s Lutheran Church in McIntosh. The Rev. Dr. Lawrence Wohlrabe, bishop with Northwestern Minnesota Synod ELCA in Moorhead, said Morey resigned as pastor at the churches Dec. 12.

Morey remains on the ELCA clergy roster, but has been asked to cease functioning as a pastor pending the outcome of the court proceedings in Clearwater County.

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.

Jury seated in Roy Harriger trial

NEW YORK
WKBW

[with video]

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) – The trial against a local pastor accused of sexual abuse and incest resumes Wednesday.

A jury was seated Tuesday in the case against 70-year-old Roy Harriger, who is accused of abusing two of his children back in 2000 and 2001.

Harriger is charged with course of sexual conduct, sodomy and incest.

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.

Jury selected in local pastor’s sexual abuse trial

NEW YORK
WIVB

[with video]

By Mark Belcher, News 4 Digital Producer
Published: January 21, 2015

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WIVB) – A jury has been selected in a trial over a local pastor accused of sexual abuse.

The jury was selected Tuesday, and the trial will proceed Wednesday for Rev. Roy Harriger, a pastor charged with three counts of coercive criminal sexual conduct against a child, one count of first degree incest, two counts of incest and three counts of endangering the welfare of a child.

Fifteen people across three states came out saying the 70-year-old molested them as children, and Harriger was arrested.

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.

Pastor accused of sex abuse seeks lower bail

OREGON
Bend Bulletin

By Claire Withycombe / The Bulletin / @kcwithycombe
Published Jan 21, 2015

Deschutes County Circuit Judge Beth Bagley, after hearing arguments from attorneys, postponed a decision Tuesday on whether to modify release conditions for a Gresham pastor accused of sexually abusing two children in Deschutes County between 2002 and 2004.

Bagley is scheduled to make a decision after hearing further arguments Thursday.

Appearing via video from the Deschutes County jail, 42-year-old James Worley wept as his lawyer, Richard Cohen, argued to reduce the $1 million bail set by Deschutes County Circuit Judge Walter “Randy” Miller on Jan. 7. Members of the Powell Valley Church, where Worley is a general pastor, filled the courtroom, holding hands and bibles.

Cohen argued Worley had been cooperating with authorities since the allegations of abuse were disclosed by a female in July 2012. He was arrested on a warrant by Gresham Police on Dec. 17, Cohen said.

“It’s been known for a long time,” said Cohen. He said Worley, per a court ruling, has maintained no contact with one of the alleged victims, a female who is now an adult.

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.

U.S. Supreme Court allows lawsuit to continue against Baton Rouge priest over claim parishioner kissed, fondled teen

LOUISIANA
The Advocate

BY HEIDI KINCHEN| HKINCHEN@THEADVOCATE.COM
Jan. 20, 2015

A Baton Rouge trial judge will be allowed to determine whether a teenager’s communications with her Catholic priest about alleged sexual abuse by an older parishioner were actually confessions or if the priest had a duty to report the allegations.

The U.S. Supreme Court declined Tuesday to intervene in the case, which has pitted state laws meant to protect children against the age-old secrecy surrounding religious confessions.

State District Judge Mike Caldwell, who sits on the 19th Judicial District Court, has said the priest would not be legally compelled to break the seal of confession by testifying about what the young woman told him. The Diocese of Baton Rouge, however, has argued that if the girl testified about the confessions, the priest would have to either accept her version of events or break the seal and face automatic excommunication.

The case involves a woman who claims that in 2008, when she was 14, she told her pastor she was sexually abused by a now-deceased church parishioner. The woman, Rebecca Mayeux, has said the Rev. Jeff Bayhi, of Our Lady of the Assumption in Clinton, responded by telling her it was her problem and she should “sweep it under the floor and get rid of it.”

In 2009, Mayeux’s parents sued Bayhi, the Baton Rouge diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, and George Charlet Jr., the man who allegedly abused her. They argued in the lawsuit that the priest neglected his duty under state law to report the alleged abuse to authorities.

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.

U.S. Supreme Court declines to get involved in Baton Rouge confession case

LOUISIANA
WAFB

[with video]

By Tyana Daquano

BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) –

A decision made Monday by the U.S. Supreme Court could threaten the sanctity of confessions told to Catholic priests, so says the Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge. They are involved in a sexual abuse case, filed by a Baton Rouge family.

Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision not to get involved in the case, the Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge released a statement that said in part, that they are “disappointed the court denied our request … to intervene in this case, which has significant ramifications for religious freedom in Louisiana and beyond.”

The lawsuit, filed by the parents of a then 14-year-old girl, alleges their daughter was molested by an older parishioner, George Charlet, Jr., now deceased. Attorney’s say three times in confession, the girl told her priest, Father Jeff Bayhi, that Charlet touched her and made inappropriate comments.

“This is kissing and touching and fondling,” their attorney, Brian Abels said in July of last year. “The very last time our client thought she was going to be raped.”

Abels, says his client should be able to to tell what they say is an important part of her story in court.

He says because the priest did not report the alleged abuse, he and the church are liable.

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.

Eric Dejaeger sentencing: lawyers’ arguments expected today

CANADA
CBC News

Jan 21, 2015

Crown and defence lawyers are expected to make their arguments in Iqaluit this morning in the sentencing hearing of Eric Dejaeger.

Dejaeger, a 67-year-old former Oblate priest, was convicted last year on 32 counts of child sexual abuse dating back to his time as a priest in Igloolik, Nunavut, between 1978 and 1982.

On Monday and Tuesday, 18 of his victims described to the court how those events affected them physically, emotionally and spiritually.

Some said they have either lost or found faith in the process. One woman quoted the Bible, saying the former priest did not know God. Another said he won’t baptize his daughter. He, like most of the others who made statements, said they turned instead to drugs and alcohol to “numb the pain and shame.”

They and their families wept and wailed even as court was adjourned for the day.

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

Nunavut abuse victim hurls scripture at pedophile ex-priest Dejaeger

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

JIM BELL

The pedophile ex-priest Eric Dejaeger “did not know God,” an Igloolik sexual abuse victim declared Jan. 20 in a victim impact statement that quoted from St. Paul the Apostle’s instructions on how to live a good life.

Dejaeger, who appears before the Nunavut Court of Justice in Iqaluit this week for a sentencing hearing, is guilty on 32 counts, most of them sex crimes against Inuit girls and boys committed between 1976 and 1982 in Igloolik.

The woman, who Dejaeger molested at the Roman Catholic mission in Igloolik when she was aged between five and seven, gave the first of six victim impact statements read in court on the afternoon of Jan. 20.

She quoted verses from St. Paul’s first epistle to the Thessalonians that suggest Dejeager will face the vengeance of God in the afterlife.

“That no man go beyond and defraud his brother in any matter: because that the Lord is the avenger of all such, as we also have forewarned you and testified,” the woman said

“For God hath not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness.”

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

January 20, 2015

Judge overseeing church bankruptcy orders mediation

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Martin Moylan Jan 20, 2015

The federal judge overseeing the bankruptcy of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has ordered all parties into mediation.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel expressed concern about the length and cost of other church bankruptcies. He is starting off this case with mediation to encourage a relatively quick and inexpensive settlement.

Archdiocese officials said they were pleased by the mediation order, as was attorney Jeffrey Anderson, an attorney who represents sex abuse victims. He said judges typically order mediation only later in a bankruptcy, after legal bills mount.

“Here he ordered it right away, which means all those administrative costs and bankruptcy lawyers’ attorneys’ fees don’t have to be expended,” Anderson said.

Mediation could take weeks or months and may or may not work.

So far, insurers have disputed archdiocese insurance claims that would help fund compensation for abuse victims.

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 Inviolable Seal of Confession?

UNITED STATES
Canonical Consultation

01/20/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

Today, the United States Supreme Court denied the petition for certiorari in the Roman Catholic Church of the Diocese of Baton Rouge v. Mayeux. This means that our nation’s highest court will not consider the issue of whether the courts can determine what constitutes a ‘confession per se’ or whether such courts must ‘respect the church’s own view that such communications are confessional and absolutely protected from disclosure by the priest on penalty of automatic excommunication’. For the full summary of the issue, please see the SCOTUSblog.

This question is only one aspect of an otherwise highly contentious case which touches on the very nature of the sacramental seal (canon 983, 1). Canon law holds that the seal of confession is inviolable, and imposes ‘severe’ punishment upon a priest who directly or indirectly reveals the privileged communication. As such, the Diocese of Baton Rouge is arguing that a priest cannot be compelled to testify about the contents of a confession.

In general, I think Catholics support this understanding of the nature of the sacramental seal. However, what makes this case interesting is that the privilege is being claimed, by the priest and the diocese, not for the benefit of the penitent but for the benefit of said priest and diocese, who are being sued for negligence. For, it is alleged that a minor penitent, Rebecca Mayeux, confessed to her priest, Father George Bayhi, that a fellow parishioner, an adult, had molested her. According to nola.com, the molestation was alleged to have occurred in 2008, when both Rebecca and her alleged abuser were members of Our Lady of the Assumption Catholic Church in Clinton. The Mayeux family alleges that on three separate dates in July 2008, Rebecca told Father Bayhi that the adult parishioner had inappropriately touched her, kissed her and told her “he wanted to make love to her.” Bayhi did not report the abuse to civil authorities or take other measures to prevent further abuse from occurring because, he argues, the communications occurred during the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

Generally, priests are exempt from mandatory reporting laws when the information is received in the act of sacramental confession. What makes this case interesting is that the Louisiana Supreme Court ruled in May that priests should be subject to mandatory reporting laws if the person who makes the confession waives confidentiality. In other word, the Louisiana Supreme Court found that confidentially in such contexts is intended to protect the person who made the confessions, not the person who receives them.

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.

Federal Judge Orders Archdiocese To Mediation With Abuse Victims

MINNESOTA
WCCO

[with video]

Reg Chapman

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — Last week, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced it was filing for bankruptcy amid lawsuits claiming sexual abuse by priests.

Tuesday, they were in court to hash out some of the details. Archbishop John Nienstedt said bankruptcy is best for the victims and the church.

All parties involved are happy they’ve been ordered to mediation by Federal Judge Robert Kressel. They said they feel mediation without confrontation is what’s best for a speedy resolution in Federal bankruptcy court.

“An extremely positive day for the faithful,” Attorney Charles Rogers said.

Attorneys for the Archdiocese are satisfied that the church will continue to operate as it has in the past while bankruptcy procedures continue. Judge Kressel allowed the church to continue to pay critical salaries, benefits and such to make sure it continues with its core mission.

Kressel’s decision for mediation for all parties involved also sat well with attorney’s for abuse survivors.

“It’s a really good day and he really ordered a positive way to get something good done for these survivors and the operation of the archdiocese to continue,” Attorney Jeff Anderson 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.

Statement Regarding Rev. Paul Moudry

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Source: Anne Steffens, Interim Director of Communications

From Auxiliary Bishop Andrew Cozzens

Rev. Paul Moudry has resigned as pastor of the Church of Saint Margaret Mary in Golden Valley. Rev. Moudry has been on a voluntary leave of absence from priestly ministry since November 2013. Over the past year, Rev. Moudry has cooperated with the Archdiocese and the Ministerial Standards Board in a comprehensive review of prior misconduct (with adults in non-illegal activities) from many years ago.

Archbishop John Nienstedt accepted Rev. Moudry’s offer to resign as pastor of Saint Margaret Mary. Rev. Moudry will continue his voluntary leave of absence and has participated in making appropriate disclosure to his parishioners and trustees.

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 quits as pastor of Golden Valley church over ‘prior misconduct’

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

The Rev. Paul Moudry has resigned as pastor of the Church of St. Margaret Mary in Golden Valley, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Tuesday.

Moudry has been on a voluntary leave of absence from ministry since November 2013 while officials investigated a “prior misconduct which occurred many years ago” with adults in non-illegal activities.

In a statement, the archdiocese said Archbishop John Nienstedt accepted Moudry’s offer to resign as pastor of St. Margaret Mary.

Moudry will continue his voluntary leave of absence, the archdiocese added, noting that Moudry has cooperated in the misconduct inquiry and made “appropriate” disclosure to parishioners and trustees.

An attorney for Moudry last fall acknowledged “two anonymous claims of misconduct” in an October 2013 letter to MPR News.

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

Bankruptcy judge sends Twin Cities Archdiocese to mediation

MINNESOTA
Fairfield Citizen

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A bankruptcy court judge has ordered the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis to try to reach a settlement with attorneys for victims of clergy sexual abuse.

The archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 protection last week, saying reorganization is the best way to put victims first while continuing the church’s mission.

The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports (http://strib.mn/181I6W1 ) that U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel ordered the case into mediation on Tuesday. He said it would be the most efficient way to settle the bankruptcy.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Arthur Boylan will oversee the mediation, where the archdiocese will try to settle with its insurers and victims.

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.

Survivor’s Advocate Applauds Bankruptcy Judge Kressel’s Ordering of All Parties to Mediation

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

News Release

January 20, 2015

(St. Paul, MN) – At a hearing today, United States Bankruptcy Judge Robert J. Kressel ordered survivors, the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, and the insurance companies, over objections from the insurance companies, to mediation for resolution of all current and future claims. The mediation was ordered before Judge Arthur Boylan, a respected and former federal magistrate, now a professional mediator who was instrumental in settling the NFL dispute.

“We are delightful we have the opportunity to get to the negotiation table early before huge attorney’s fees deplete the Archdiocese’s assets and there will be ample funds for survivors with full participation from the Archdiocese and the insurance companies involved,” said attorney Jeff Anderson. “Judge Kressel’s order creates the opportunity to ensure a fair and speedy resolution of all current and future claims under the Child Victims Act.”

Contact Jeff Anderson: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.817.8665
Contact Mike Finnegan: Office/651.227.9990 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.

Kenyan Bishops Oppose Tetanus Vaccine for Women, Children

KENYA
Commonweal

Lisa Fullam January 19, 2015

On Jan 14, the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a statement reiterating their opposition to a WHO/UNICEF sponsored mass vaccination effort aimed at reducing maternal and neonatal tetanus. Their claim is that the vaccine is laced with Human Chorionic Gonadotropin and will result in permanent infertility in vaccinated women. They also state that the same was done in Mexico, Nicaragua, and the Philippines, also under WHO sponsorship. Their fears were triggered by reports of a group called the Kenyan Catholic Doctors association, who boldly stated:

This proved right our worst fears; that this WHO/UNICEF campaign is not about eradicating neonatal tetanus but is a well-coordinated, forceful, population control, mass sterilization exercise using a proven fertility regulating vaccine.

Well, let’s unpack this.

Maternal and neonatal tetanus is most common among women who deliver their babies in unsterile conditions and/or with poorly trained assistants. While more than 90% of Kenyan women receive prenatal health care, fewer than half deliver their babies in a hospital. In 2013, Kenya abolished hospital fees for delivery in an effort to address the nation’s rising maternal death rate. At least at first, this initiative didn’t seem to have much impact.

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 orders Twin Cities archdiocese bankruptcy into mediation

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune
Updated: January 20, 2015 – 4:43 PM

Archdiocese and victims’ attorneys will work toward settlement.

The bankruptcy filing of the Archdiocese of St. Paul -Minneapolis was ordered out of the courtroom and into the conference room Tuesday, when a bankruptcy judge ordered the case to mediation.

The archdiocese, its insurance companies, and attorneys for abuse victims will attempt to reach a mediated settlement under an order from U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel.

Kressel said it was the most efficient, cost-effective way to settle the bankruptcy. He named Magistrate Judge Arthur J. Boylan to oversee the mediation.

“If he can settle an NFL strike he can settle most anything,” said Kressel, referring to Boylan’s mediation of the 2011 labor dispute between the National Football League and its players.

The archdiocese and victims’ attorneys praised the decision.

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

NY–New lawsuit says accused predator priest is in Long Island parish now

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Jan. 20,

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

A new civil lawsuit charges that Rockville Centre Bishop William Murphy is keeping a priest on the job in a parish despite a credible report that the priest sexually assaulted a girl.

[Jeff Anderson & Associates]

Father Gregory Yacyshyn now works at St. Jude in Mastic Beach on Long Island. He was apparently never suspended after a young woman told top Catholic officials that Fr. Yacyshyn had sexually violated her. That’s a violation of local and national church abuse policies and repeated pledges by bishops to put the safety of kids first and promptly suspend accused predator priests while investigations are done.

The alleged crimes happened at St. Francis Assisi Parish in Greenlawn. Bishop Murphy, it should be noted, was a long-time close aide and advisor to Boston’s disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law.

Bishop Murphy’s public relations staff will no doubt claim that they were allegedly unable to “substantiate” the girl’s report. Catholic officials say this often. But if they would honor their policies about being “transparent” in clergy sex cases and publicly disclose allegations against priests, many more such charges would be deemed “substantiated.”

In other words, bishops like Murphy want to have their cake and eat it too: be secretive about abuse reports, and then tell accusers “we can’t corroborate your allegation.”

We hope every single person who may have seen, suspected or suffered child sex crimes by Fr. Yacyshyn – or cover ups by Bishop Murphy – will find the courage to call police, expose wrongdoers, deter deceit, protect kids and start healing.

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.

Westminster sex probe member ‘bullied by QC’

UNITED KINGDOM
Yorkshire Post

A MEMBER of the independent panel into child sexual abuse has told MPs she has been “bullied” by the barrister conducting the embattled inquiry.

Home Secretary Theresa May set up the inquiry to find out whether public bodies had neglected or covered up allegations of child sex abuse in the wake of claims paedophiles had operated in Westminster in the 1980s.

Panel member Sharon Evans, a child abuse survivor and chief executive of the Dot Com Children’s Foundation, which helps prevent children from becoming victims of violence or abuse, told the Home Affairs Select Committee she felt “bullied” by counsel to the inquiry Ben Emmerson QC.

Ms Evans said Mr Emmerson was “overstepping the mark” with his advice, including demands she re-write letters sent to the Home Secretary and agreed he was “running the show”.

Chair of the committee Keith Vaz asked Ms Evans about reported concerns she had over alleged threats made by Mr Emmerson in respect of evidence she would give to the Committee.

Ms Evans said: “I do feel concerned, very concerned, yes.”

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

Child abuse inquiry panel member accuses counsel of intimidation

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Alan Travis and Sandra Laville
Tuesday 20 January 2015

The chaos behind the scenes of the official inquiry into child abuse has been laid bare with accusations of bullying and silencing members as the investigation has struggled to get off the ground.

One panel member, Sharon Evans, an abuse survivor and chief executive of the Dot Com children’s charity, told MPs that the inquiry’s counsel, Ben Emmerson QC, had effectively taken it over in the absence of an appointed chairman, and been guilty of making threats and intimidating panel members.

She made the accusations to the Commons home affairs select committee as the home secretary, Theresa May, considers whether to disband the independent panel and replace it with a fresh statutory inquiry.

The inquiry set up in July in the wake of the Savile, Rotherham and other child sex abuse scandals still has no chairman after the home secretary’s first two nominees were both forced to step down because of their connections to the establishment.

Evans was giving MPs an update on the progress of the inquiry along with other inquiry members, Drussilla Sharpling, Prof Jenny Pearce and an adviser, Prof Alexis Jay who wrote the report revealing that there were 1,400 child sex abuse victims over 16 years in the Rotherham area.

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.

Keith Vaz: Child abuse panel members ‘intimidated’ over what they can say to Commons committee

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By Tom Whitehead 20 Jan 2015

The troubled inquiry in to child sexual abuse was thrown in to fresh controversy last night after an expert on it claimed she was being “bullied and intimidated”.

Sharon Evans, a child abuse survivor, accused the inquiry’s lawyer of “overstepping the mark” including claims he had put pressure on how she should give evidence to a parliamentary committee.

It is the latest blow for the inquiry set up by Home Secretary Theresa May, to find out whether public bodies had neglected or covered up allegations of child sex abuse in the wake of claims paedophiles had operated in Westminster in the 1980s.

It has already been hit by the resignations of both Baroness Butler-Sloss and then Dame Fiona Woolf as the chairman after each became entangled in allegations of conflict of interest.

Mrs Evans, chief executive of the Dotcom Children’s Foundation, which helps prevent children from becoming victims of violence or abuse, told the Home Affairs Select Committee she felt “bullied and intimidated” by counsel to the inquiry Ben Emmerson QC.

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

Child abuse victims’ lawyer calls for swift decision on inquiry panel’s future

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Sandra Laville
Tuesday 20 January 2015

A lawyer representing victims of child abuse has called for a swift decision by Theresa May on the future of the independent panel set up to investigate institutional abuse amid concerns that evidence is being lost or destroyed.

Alison Millar, from Leigh Day, who represents around 50 survivors of child abuse, spoke as members of the independent panel appointed to carry out an inquiry into institutional failings to protect children, were due to give evidence to the home affairs select committee on Tuesday.

The independent inquiry announced by the home secretary was set up seven months ago but its future is uncertain.

Two chairs have been forced to resign over their connections with establishment figures, and no new chair has been appointed. There have been complaints from victims about the lack of transparency in the appointment of the panel of experts, and criticism over the actions of two members for what is claimed were inappropriate communications with victims.

May is considering three options to reconstitute the independent inquiry as a statutory investigation, after complaints from some survivors about the lack of transparency over their appointment. Only one of these options involves keeping the same panel in place. Sources close to the inquiry said it was anticipated that the panel would be disbanded in the near future.

Millar said the panel had lost the confidence of many victims and a decision on selecting a new panel had to be made very soon.

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.

Civil Lawsuit Filed Against Priest for Child Sexual Abuse

NEW YORK
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Media Advisory
January 20, 2015

Diocese of Rockville Centre Sued for Hiding Sexual Offenders and Creating a Dangerous Public Nuisance

Identities and Locations of Credibly Accused Sexually Abusive Clerics Sought
Alleged Perpetrator Still Allowed to Minister in New York

What: At a press conference Wednesday, January 21, 2015 on Long Island, attorneys Jeff Anderson and J. Michael Reck of Jeff Anderson & Associates will:

Announce the filing of a complaint on behalf of a 20 year-old woman naming the Diocese of Rockville Centre, St. Francis Assisi Parish and Father Gregory Yacyshyn as defendants. Yacyshyn is alleged to have abused the woman when she was a young child and parishioner at St. Francis of Assisi in Greenlawn, New York. He remains in ministry at St. Jude in Mastic Beach, NY.

Discuss the public nuisance claim alleged in the lawsuit for the Diocese’s failure to implement proper child protection safety measures and for their continued refusal to release the identities and internal church documents on known offenders in spite of previous Grand Jury investigations.

Encourage other sexual abuse survivors to come forward and demand the diocese remove Father Yacyshyn and release the identities and names of known clerical offenders.
Photos and written statement from the survivor will be provided.

WHEN: Wednesday, January 21, 2015 at 1:30PM EST

WHERE: Long Island Marriott
101 James Doolittle Blvd.
Long Island University Room
Uniondale, NY 11553

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

Contact: Jeff Anderson: Cell: 612.817.8665 Office: 651.318.2650
Mike Reck: Cell: 714.742.6593 Office: 646.649.4960

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.

Case of bishop accused in bicyclist death …

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

Case of bishop accused in bicyclist death opens debate about theology of addiction

By Michelle Boorstein January 20

The case of a high-ranking Episcopal bishop charged with drinking and texting before fatally hitting a bicyclist has raised questions about everything from church politics to bike lanes. But no debate about Bishop Heather Cook has been as intense as that about the theology of addiction.

Is it a sin? Does it qualify for forgiveness? Or are addicts blameless victims of disease, inculpable?

And how did these topics impact the leaders of the dioceses’ of Easton and Maryland – Cook’s last two places of employment – first when she was arrested for drunk-driving in 2010, and then last year when she was selected despite that to become Maryland’s first female bishop?

In small church discussion groups, in sermons and on Christian listservs, the ways Episcopal officials handled Cook have fueled debate about how Christianity really sees addicts.

“Right now in the addictions community there is a lot of reaction to people who want to see addiction as a moral failing,” said the Rev. Joe Stewart-Sicking, a priest in Cook’s diocese who teaches pastoral counseling at Loyola University Maryland. “Sin is something we are all wrapped up in, and when you start delineating sin, we miss out that we are all interrelated. It’s not just her role that led to the suffering. Obviously other people are involved, we ourselves are involved, even if it’s making a society that someone can’t come out and get help they need.”

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

MN–New Ulm bishop refuses to disclose abusive clergy

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, January 20

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

Why is New Ulm the only Minnesota diocese still refusing to disclose names of predator priests? Because for six key years (2001-2007), when the Catholic Church’s clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis exploded into an international scandal, John Nienstedt headed that diocese.

[Jeff Anderson & Associates]

We believe that current New Ulm officials – including Bishop John M. LeVoir – are protecting themselves and their reputations AND the reputation and career of the embattled Nienstedt.

So we hope that this continuing reckless and hurtful secrecy will backfire. We hope the recalcitrance of New Ulm Catholic officials will prod even more victims, witnesses and whistleblowers in that diocese to speak up, regardless of what courts do or don’t do to force disclosures by these irresponsible “shepherds.”

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.

On Martin Luther King, Jr., Day: Jerry Slevin on Pope Francis’s Trip to the Philippines, and Catholics’ Dream

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

And another King-day-themed posting: at his Christian Catholicism site, Jerry Slevin comments on Pope Francis’s encounter in the Philippines with a street child who poured out her anguish to him immediately before the pope gave a homily reasserting the papal ban on the use of contraception:

In “dreaming” about the pope’s encounter in the Philippines with the young “street child” on the eve of Martin Luther King’s US holiday, I had a dream! I dreamed that the pope told the young former street girl what the Vatican’s real strategy was. If he told her, I dreamed it would go something like this. Pope Francis would have said:

(1) I was elected by frightened cardinals to keep them out of jail for crimes related to child abuse cover-ups and financial corruption;

(2) My priority is protecting bishops, all 5,000 of them, while maximizing their wealth in their unaccountable lifetime positions;

And, of course, as I read Jerry’s commentary, I think of his repeated warnings to those of us who may be inclined to view Pope Francis as a kind of Santa Claus, which, in turn, echo Sister Teresa Forcades’s observation (I cited it this morning) that Catholics need to ditch the notion of a “Pope Messiah,” and I become more convinced than ever that effective change of the Catholic church will come from the bottom of the church and not the top, from its margins and not from its (corrupt) center.

And certainly not from the media that dance so beautifully to the choreography presented to the media by that corrupt center . . . .

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.

U.S. Supreme Court will not hear Baton Rouge Catholic confession case

LOUISIANA
The Times-Picayune

[Supreme Court document]

By Emily Lane, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
on January 20, 2015

The Supreme Court of the United States will not hear a petition by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge regarding a civil lawsuit the diocese says threatens the confidentiality of the confession, according to the SCOTUS blog.

The petition seeks to block a child from testifying in a civil suit against the church and priest about what she said in confession. The live blog, which reports on orders from the U.S. Supreme Court, reported Tuesday (Jan. 20) morning that the high court denied writ of certiorari to hear the case.

The Louisiana Supreme Court’s ruling, rendered in May 2014, laid out arguments that priests should be subject to mandatory reporting laws regarding abuse of minors if the person who makes the confession waives confidentiality. Normally, priests are exempt as mandatory reporters in the setting of confessions. The decision by the state’s high court stated confidentially is intended to protect the person who made the confessions, not the person who receives them.

The original case involves a then-minor girl who alleges she confessed during the sacrament of Reconciliation to Baton Rouge priest Father George Bayhi that a fellow church parishioner had molested her.

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 Won’t Hear Priest’s Appeal of Ruling Reviving Lawsuit

WASHINGTON (DC)
ABC News

The Supreme Court is allowing a lawsuit to proceed against a Louisiana Roman Catholic church and a priest over allegations that a teen was kissed and fondled by an adult church parishioner.

The justices did not comment Tuesday in rejecting an appeal from the Roman Catholic Church of the Diocese of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and the priest of a state Supreme Court decision. That earlier ruling revived the lawsuit that contends the teen told the priest what had happened to her and that the priest should have reported the allegations.

The church and the priest argued that allowing the lawsuit to go forward could lead to the priest being called to testify about information that was disclosed during private confessions.

The case is Roman Catholic Diocese v. Mayeux, 14-220.

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

Pope Francis has rebooted the debate on family and sexual mores

ROME
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor January 20, 2015

ROME — When Pope Francis arrived in the Philippines Jan. 15, both his mind and his heart were focused on the people he was coming to see. His primary motive was to comfort the survivors of an almost apocalyptic 2013 super-typhoon, but he also knew the entire nation would be ecstatic that the pope — any pope, really — was in town.

The Philippines — 81% Catholic — arguably represent the greatest home court advantage for a pope on the face of the planet, and Francis wanted to return the favor.

Yet popes, like politicians, tend to craft their messages for multiple audiences. Although Francis’ principal concentration may have been on the Filipinos who defied a tropical storm to turn out in the millions, he simultaneously seemed to be speaking to a much smaller group, one that wasn’t even physically present.

In effect, Francis appeared to be talking to the roughly 300 bishops and other Church leaders who will make up the next Synod of Bishops on the Family in October.

One way to read what the pope was trying to accomplish is as a reboot of the synod debate, reassuring conservatives that whatever happens in October, the basics of Catholic teaching on sexuality and the family are not at risk.

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

Pope Francis: No Catholic needs to breed like ‘rabbits’ – Really, since when?

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

* Pope Francis is following his own advice and “creating a mess” over contraception. He was provoked by seeing in the Philippines the horrors of 1.5 million “street children”, many forced to work in Manila’s key “industry”, the child sex trade, that became inescapably evident on his recent trip. Since two modern popes condemned contraception, Francis is also undermining the increasingly incredible Vatican claim since 1870 that popes are infallible.

* This infallibility claim is the cornerstone of modern papal power. Is the pope intentionally trying to curtail future papal power? Whatever his intent, the more he pushes for his contraception ban in the face of overwhelming scientific and social evidence, the clearer it becomes that claiming personal infallibility makes popes appear weaker, not stronger. This is evident in the Pope Francis’ rambling and evasive answers to reporters on his return flight to Rome. By comparison to the mishandling of contraception, Pope Francis is making the condemnation of Galileo four centuries ago seem like a minor matter.

* Understandably, a visibly tired and frustrated Pope Francis said yesterday (1/19/15) in response to a reporter’s question that good Roman Catholics do not need to breed like “rabbits”, but should practice “responsible” parenting instead. The full question and answer is below. To see the pope’s evident frustration , please watch

* [BBC]

* The day before (1/18/15) I had e-mailed key Vatican reporters (and posted on my blog) this: “And yes, … , Pope Francis, as expected, continued to push the papal “Rabbit Rule” (Breed & Breed More!) of Popes Pius XI (1930) and Paul VI (1968), and all popes thereafter. As discussed below, this is tied to protecting the papal “power of infallibility” and appears still to be the cornerstone of the Vatican’s key moral ‘doctrine of procreative sex, ONLY’ “. This repeated my earlier statement on the Rabbitt Rule at Francis’ Breeding Policy Fails Kids, Women & Gay

* The pope, of course, is revisiting the classic struggle of twenty years ago of Hillary Clinton and Francis’ current top female adviser, Mary Ann Glendon. The pope and Mary Ann Glendon appear to be gearing up to take Hillary Clinton on again in the upcoming US presidential election. Please see Hillary Clinton vs. Pope Francis in 2015 ? If the pope reverses the ban on contraception, the “infallibility” dogma is likely finished for all practical purposes. If the pope fails to reverse the ban, the Vatican will likely lose many millions of more Catholics who leave the Church, especially women.

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

Hearing Today on Public Nuisance Claim Involving the Diocese of New Ulm

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

Media Advisory

January 20, 2014

Survivors, advocates pursue transparency, disclosure from the only Minnesota diocese yet to disclose the identities of clerics accused of child sexual abuse

(New Ulm, MN) – At a hearing today at 3:00PM in New Ulm at the Brown County Courthouse, attorneys will argue on behalf of sexual abuse survivors to allow public nuisance claims to move forward that were alleged in several lawsuits filed against the New Ulm Diocese. Five lawsuits have been filed on behalf of seven survivors alleging the diocese created a public nuisance by not disclosing the names and files on clerics accused of child sexual abuse.

The Diocese of New Ulm is the only Minnesota diocese yet to disclose this information.

At least 12 priests have been accused of child sexual abuse in the Diocese of New Ulm. The lawsuits filed to-date involve claims of child sexual abuse involving Father Michael Skoblik, Father David Roney, Father James Fitzgerald, and Father Francis Markey.

Note: Copies of the complaints filed can be found at www.andersonadvocates.com.

Contact: Mike Finnegan: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.205.5531
Contact: Jeff Anderson: Office/651.227.9990 Cell/612.817.8665

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.

„Manche leiden ein Leben lang“

DEUTSCHLAND
Morgenweb

[An Interview with Harald Dressing, a psychiatrist who is leading an interdisciplinary study of sexual abuse within the German Catholic church.

It is known that the Freiburg diocese paid 736,000 euros to 130 victims. There are 185 documented victims, including children in care.

The Speyer diocese has reported 53 cases of sexual abuse. In 33 cases, the victims have received material benefits and 15 cases were closed without resolution and four are still in process. Overall, the diocese so far has paid 223,000 euros.

In the Mainz diocese, 277,000 have been paid. Forty-two victims submitted applications and three were rejected. Two applications are still being examined.]

MANNHEIM. Vor fünf Jahren kam der sexuelle Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche ans Licht. Der Mannheimer Psychiater Harald Dreßing leitet die interdisziplinäre Studie, die die Kirche in Auftrag gegeben hat: “Wir sind völlig unabhängig”, sagt er, das stehe so im Vertrag. Die Studie läuft seit einem halben Jahr, Ergebnisse sollen Ende 2017 vorliegen.

Was tragen Sie zur Studie bei?

Harald Dreßing: Unsere Aufgabe besteht unter anderem darin zu beschreiben, wie die Akten in den Bistümern geführt werden, wie groß das Ausmaß des Missbrauchs ist, aber auch wie das Thema Sexualität in der Priesterausbildung verankert ist.

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.

Eric Dejaeger sentencing: former priest’s hearing continues

CANADA
CBC News

The sentencing hearing for former Roman Catholic priest Eric Dejaeger will continue in Iqaluit Tuesday.

Dejaeger is being sentenced for 32 sex crimes. He pleaded guilty to eight charges at the start of his trial last year and was found guilty on 24 other charges.

He was convicted of 24 counts of indecent assault, one of unlawful confinement, two of buggery, three of unlawful sexual intercourse, one of sexual assault and one of bestiality.

Most of the crimes were committed against children in Igloolik, Nunavut, more than 30 years ago.

Crown prosecutor Barry Nordin says he expects between 16 and 18 people will give victim impact statements during the sentencing hearing.

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.

Magdalene survivor: ‘They’re ignoring my basic human rights’

IRELAND
Irish Times

Sorcha Pollak

Diane Croghan was 13 years old when she climbed inside a laundry van to escape the Sisters of Mercy Training School in Summerhill, Co Wexford.

After more than three years of isolation, hard work and abuse at the Magdalene laundry at Summerhill, Diane decided to run away to Dublin.

“It was dreadful, we weren’t allowed to speak with one another,” she says. “I think we worked from 7am-7pm but I’m not sure. We didn’t know the time, we had nothing to show us what time it was.”
The entrance to the former Magdalene laundry on Stanhope Street, Dublin.

After Diane escaped she found work as a domestic servant in Ballsbridge in Dublin. She later worked as a waitress in the Shelbourne hotel.

Diane’s testimony of the three years she spent working at Summerhill has been rejected by the Department of Justice reparation scheme for former residents of Magdalene laundries.

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 Fifth Memory

UNITED STATES
The Garden of Roses: Stories of Abuse and Healing

Virginia Jones

I have four memories before I was sexually abused at age four during the summer of 1963.

My very first memory took place when I was about 17 months old. I remember standing by my Dad’s plant building where my family first lived when we came to Colusa County, California, in 1960. I remember the white painted siding of the building and the outfit I was wearing, probably a hand-me-down from my brother — greyish baggy pants and greyish baby t-shirt. There is nothing more to the memory. I have no idea why I remember such a dull and minor incident, but I do.

My next memory was much more upsetting. It took place the following October. My heavily pregnant mother was walking from the house to the garage by the plant building near our rural home. It was raining and the the dirt road that led from the house to the garage was pockmarked with rained filled potholes. I had trouble walking around these holes and felt abandoned. I wanted and needed help that never came. I started to cry. Looking back I guess my mother had carried me up from house to car up until then and then stopped because it was too challenging to carry a toddler while 8 months pregnant.

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.

Magdalene survivors urge Coalition to deliver on promises

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Emma-Jane Hade
PUBLISHED
20/01/2015

A survivor of the Magdalene laundries who is now battling lung cancer has said the Government must deliver on its promises for redress in full.

Dubliner Martina Keogh spent almost two years in two different Magdalene laundry homes when she was a young woman.

She is supporting a coalition of groups who are calling on the Government to fully implement all the recommendations made by Mr Justice John Quirke in the restorative redress scheme, particularly in relation to healthcare.

The group, which includes Justice for Magdalenes Research (JFMR), the National Women’s Council of Ireland, the Irish Council for Civil Liberties and Amnesty International, claims the Redress for Women Resident in Certain Institutions Bill is an “unacceptable paring back of what the Government promised”.

Maeve O’Rourke, from JFMR, said the bill promises little more than the regular medical card, “which most of the women already have.”

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.

Group Accuses Diocese Of Naming Building After Alleged Sex Offender

SOUTH DAKOTA
South Dakots Public Broadcasting

[with audio]

By CHARLES MICHAEL RAY

The group called SNAP–Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests–is critical of the Sioux Falls Diocese for naming a homeless shelter after a bishop who was accused of sex abuse by three separate individuals.

Bishop Paul Dudley who died in 2006 at the age of 79 was cleared after an internal church investigation. Dudley was not brought before law enforcement as the statute of limitations had expired.

You can hear this story by clicking play below.

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.

Sexueller Missbrauch: Pater von Kloster Ettal vor Gericht

DEUTSCHLAND
Abendzeitung

[He was a priest and educator at the venerable Upper Bavaria school called Ettal and he had a relationship of trust with children and young people. He is alleged to have exploited that trust by sexually abusing children. Five years after the discovery of excesses of violence at the Benedictine monastery, the monk must answer before the Munich District Court.]

Munich / Ettal – by profession priest, educator boarding school in the venerable Upper Bavaria Ettal – but his relationship of trust with children and young people a religious to years of sexual abuse have exploited. Five years after the discovery of the excesses of violence in the Benedictine monastery, a monk from this Thursday (January 22) has to answer before the Munich District Court. The prosecution now accuses the prior 44-year-olds to have passed between 2001 and 2005 at two boys in two other cases he tried.

Er war eine Vertrauensperson – und soll dies bei Kindern schamlos ausgenützt haben. Jahrelang habe sich der Pater sexuell an Internatsschülern vergangen, so die Anklage. Die Fälle liegen zehn Jahre und länger zurück. Jetzt muss der 44-Jährige vor Gericht.

München/Ettal – Von Beruf Priester, Erzieher von Internatsschülern im altehrwürdigen oberbayerischen Kloster Ettal – doch sein Vertrauensverhältnis zu Kindern und Jugendlichen soll ein Ordensmann jahrelang für sexuellen Missbrauch ausgenutzt haben. Fünf Jahre nach Bekanntwerden der Gewaltexzesse in dem Benediktinerkloster muss sich ein Mönch von diesem Donnerstag (22. Januar) an vor dem Münchner Landgericht verantworten. Die Anklagebehörde wirft dem nun 44-Jährigen vor, sich zwischen 2001 und 2005 an zwei Jungen vergangen zu haben, in zwei weiteren Fällen habe er es versucht.

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.

Abuse inquiry experts facing MPs

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

The Press Association

Experts involved in the Government’s troubled child sexual abuse inquiry will appear before MPs today while councils hold a summit looking at how to protect youngsters.

The inquiry set up by Home Secretary Theresa May has stalled following the resignations of the two people appointed to chair it and uncertainty about how it will be granted extra powers.

Two members of the inquiry panel and the body’s expert adviser Professor Alexis Jay, who wrote the damning report on sexual exploitation in Rotherham, will appear before the home affairs select committee.

Mrs May revealed in a letter last month that she was considering standing down the panel in favour of a royal commission or a new inquiry on statutory terms.

As well as Prof Jay, the MPs will hear from panel members D rusilla Sharpling and Professor Jenny Pearce as part of their investigation into the inquiry, which is without a chairman following the resignations of Baroness Butler-Sloss and Dame Fiona Woolf after each became entangled in allegations of conflict of interest.

Meanwhile the Local Government Association (LGA) is holding a high-level summit to take stock of issues highlighted over the past few months, review progress in tackling historic weaknesses and determine what further action is required to protect children in future.

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

Child abuse inquiry members to face MPs

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Members of a team carrying out an inquiry into child sexual abuse are due to appear before MPs.

The inquiry was announced in July but still has no chairman, following the resignations of the government’s first two choices, and doubts remain over plans to give it extra powers.

Two members and adviser Prof Alexis Jay will face the Home Affairs Committee.

Meanwhile, the Local Government Association will hold a summit on improving child protection measures.

The inquiry, announced on 7 July by Home Secretary Theresa May, was sparked by claims of paedophiles operating in Westminster in the 1980s.

At the committee meeting later, panel members Drusilla Sharpling and Prof Jenny Pearce – along with Prof Jay – will face questions from MPs.

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.

Bessborough to become a suicide support centre

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Eoin English
Irish Examiner Reporter

One of the country’s most notorious mother and baby homes is set to get a new lease of life as a specialist suicide support and prevention centre.

Suicide charity Console has acquired Bessborough House in Cork City and plans to convert the Georgian mansion into its largest support, training and education facility.

“Bessborough House has such a sad history but we hope to turn it into something positive and life-giving — this is a positive story,” Console founder Paul Kelly 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.

Editorial: Protection, not politics, for victims

NEW YORK
Daily Gazette

Editorial

They didn’t help women and children last year. What’s going to be their excuse this year?

Two major pieces of legislation that the state Legislature failed to pass last year would have helped victims of child and sex abuse get justice, helped women attain comparable wages and protection from sexual harassment in the workplace, tightened laws on human trafficking that most often affects children and adult females, and helped protect domestic violence victims from discrimination.

One of the bills, the Child Victims Crime Bill, is being held up in the state Senate, which is controlled by Republicans. Essentially, it would eliminate the statute of limitations on new sex crimes (essentially giving traumatized victims an unlimited time to come forward and bring charges) and provide a one-year window for past victims to come forward. Religious organizations oppose all or part of the bill, fearing they will have to pay to settle age-old allegations that are difficult to prove or disprove.

On the other side, the Democrat-controlled Assembly is holding up passage of the Women’s Equality Act, a package of nine bills designed to protect women. The Senate has already passed eight of the nine bills individually this session, leaving the controversial ninth bill on abortion rights for another time.

The Assembly, as it did last year, insists on considering the bills as an all-or-nothing deal, meaning the abortion part of the bill is holding up the other eight bills related to domestic violence victims, child abuse and the other issues that have nothing to do with abortion.

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.

Date set for retired bishop and fellow former Brighton priest to face child sex abuse trial

UNITED KINGDOM
Brighton and Hove News

Posted On 20 Jan 2015
By : Frank le Duc

A trial date has been set for retired bishop Peter Ball and a fellow former Brighton priest Vickery House.

The pair have been charged with child sex abuse and were the subject of a hearing at the Central Criminal Court – better known as the Old Bailey – in London last week.

Ball, 82, of Langport, Somerset, is scheduled to face a jury on Monday 5 October alongside Vickery House, the former vicar of St Bartholomew’s Church in Brighton. No venue has been selected yet.

Ball was Bishop of Lewes from 1977 to 1992 during which time he is accused of indecently assaulting a 12 or 13-year-old boy.

He also faces charges of misconduct in public office and indecently assaulting a 19 or 20-year-old man.

The misconduct charge accuses Ball of misusing his position and authority to manipulate and prevail upon others for his own sexual gratification.

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

Former priest and school principal loses appeal against sex abuse conviction

IRELAND
Sunday World

A former priest and school principal has had his appeal against conviction for sexually abusing a pupil rejected by the Court of Appeal.

Con Desmond, (79), with an address as Woodlands, Kilrush Road, Ennis, Co Clare, had pleaded not guilty to 13 counts of indecently assaulting a boy at St Stephen’s De La Salle National School in Waterford between 1978 and June 1980.

He was found guilty by a jury at Waterford Circuit Criminal Court and sentenced to two years imprisonment on each count to run concurrently by Judge Donagh McDonagh on February 19 2013.

Desmond’s appeal against conviction, on grounds of delay and conflicting evidence, was rejected by the Court of Appeal yesterday.

Giving background to the case President of the Court of Appeal Mr Justice Seán Ryan said the first incident occurred sometime in January 1978 when the boy who was aged eight at the time had gotten very wet cycling to school.

The evidence was that his teacher, a Brother Aengus, had sent him to the principal’s office possibly with a view to getting him dried off or sending him home because he was soaked, the judge said.

He was sexually abused by Desmond on that occasion and had given extensive details about the precise events that happened, Mr Justice Ryan said. “It undoubtedly constituted serious sexual abuse”.

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

January 19, 2015

Rome–Pope will speak at United Nations

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Pope will speak @ United Nations; SNAP responds

For immediate release: Monday, Jan. 19

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( +1 312 399 4747, bblaine@snapnetwork.org )

Pope Francis confirmed today that he’ll speak to the United Nations in NYC later this year.

[Chicago Sun-Times]

When he does, we urge him to directly address the two UN panel reports that are highly critical of how top Catholic officials still endanger kids, move predators and maintain secrecy around clergy sex crimes.

Francis has basically ignored these compelling reports while defensive underlings ducked, dodged and denied the solid evidence in them and attacked the motives of the dedicated volunteers who wrote them.

While making progress on church morale, finances and governance, Francis has made minimal gestures on abuse and cover ups. He must do more. We strongly urge diplomats and UN staff to prod the pope to take tangible action to expose crimes, punish enablers, help prosecutors, deter cover ups and make kids safer right now by ousting and revealing both clerics who commit and conceal sexual violence.

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.

Richter statt Henker

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

von JÜRGEN KAUBE

Wer die Mutter von Jorge Mario Bergoglio beleidigt, weiß jetzt, womit er zu rechnen hat. Wir formulieren „er“, weil wir mal nicht annehmen möchten, dass der Bischof von Rom eine Frau schlagen würde. Und wir sprechen seinen bürgerlichen Namen an, um dogmatische Komplikationen zu vermeiden, die sich aus der Wendung „Mutter des Papstes“ ergeben könnten. Auch als Papst Franziskus I. genießt Herr Bergoglio Meinungsfreiheit. Sie wird nicht eingeschränkt, wenn man feststellt, dass nicht recht durchdacht ist, was er gesprächsweise mitgeteilt hat. Wäre törichte Kommunikation nicht geschützt, brauchten wir deutlich mehr Richter.

Dennoch muss angesichts des Papstes, der bei todernstem Anlass nicht einmal ein neckisches Augenzwinkern scheut, offenbar nicht nur die Sache mit der anderen Wange in Erinnerung gerufen werden, sondern auch, wie es sich mit der rechtsstaatlichen Ordnung verhält. Denn in ihr, der aufgegeben ist, die Meinungsfreiheit zu sichern, hat nicht, wie er sagt, „jede Religion“ eine Würde, von der sie auch gleich noch selbst feststellen dürfte, wodurch sie verletzt wird. Sondern jedes Individuum. Darin steckt mehr Christentum als in familiären Ehrbegriffen. Und selbst wenn die Mütter von Individuen beleidigt werden – der Papst mag sich an den berühmten Fall Zidane erinnert haben –, fliegt mindestens vom Platz, wer daraus ein Recht zur Selbstjustiz zieht.

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.

Kommentar: Kirche und Missbrauch – Kein Schlussstrich

DEUTSCHLAND
Deutsche Welle

[It was five years ago that the Berlin Jesuit Klaus Mertes drew attention to the religious school run by him and how he was found multiple cases of abuse at Canisius College. When this became know, more victims had – “survivors”, as they say often – turned to him. The advance and the courage of these stakeholders and the new cases that become known rocked the Catholic Church in Germany in their marrow. It took until the bishops came from a defensive moment to honest work-up.]

Es war eine der bewegenden Szenen der Philippinen-Reise von Papst Franziskus: Da stand ihm die kleine Glyzelle Palomar gegenüber und sollte dem Gast berichten von ihrem früheren Leben – von Drogen, Prostitution, der Zeit als Straßenkind. Drogen, Prostitution… – zwölf ist das Kind! Und es wird wohl für sein Leben zu tragen haben. Bald brachen dem Mädchen unter Tränen die Worte weg, es kam nur noch ein “Warum lässt Gott das zu?” Tröstend nahm Franziskus sie in den Arm und ermutigte sie im Weinen. Ja, ein rührender Moment. Ein Bild auch für die Kameras.

Man kann durchaus an diese Szene denken, wenn in diesen Tagen die katholische Kirche in Deutschland auf das Bekanntwerden von hunderten und tausenden Missbrauchsfällen in Einrichtungen der Kirche zurückblickt. Hunderte Millionen, vielleicht Milliarden Menschen weltweit sahen in ihren Fernseh-Nachrichten diese Szene. Die ehrliche Anteilnahme des Papstes an einem unschuldigen Opfer, einem Kind. Bei der sexuellen Gewalt von Klerikern oder Kirchenmitarbeitern waren es vielfach auch Kinder, die zu Opfern wurden. Aber als sie endlich an die Öffentlichkeit gingen, waren es laute Erwachsene, die ihr Recht, die Anteilnahme einforderten, ihr Schicksal beklagten.

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.

Kirche ermittelt weiter wegen Missbrauchsvorwürfen

DEUTSCHLAND
SR

{The Trier diocese is still conducting investigations against nine priests who are suspected of sexual abuse of children and adolescents, according to Bishop Stephan Ackermann.]

Im Bistum Trier laufen derzeit noch gegen neun Priester kircheninterne Ermittlungen wegen des Verdachts des sexuellen Missbrauchs von Kindern und Jugendlichen. Das sagte Bischof Ackermann am Montag in Trier. Vor fünf Jahren waren die ersten Missbrauchsfälle öffentlich bekannt geworden.

(19.01.2015) Es war ein Erdbeben als vor fünf Jahren die ersten Missbrauchsfälle innerhalb der katholischen Kirche öffentlich bekannt geworden waren. Seitdem versucht die Kirche, das für sie schwierige Thema aufzuarbeiten. Am Montag zog Bischof Stephan Ackermann Bilanz. Ackermann sagte, für die katholische Kirche seien die letzten fünf Jahre ein schmerzhafter Lernprozess gewesen.

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

Sex-abuse victim tells priest’s sentencing hearing wood smell triggers memories

CANADA
Times Colonist

The Canadian Press

IQALUIT, Nunavut – There’s a smell that brings it all back.

One whiff, and once again he’s a little boy being raped by a priest in a dank furnace room at the Catholic mission in Igloolik, Nunavut.

“Whenever I smell moldy wood, it takes me back to that place,” the man told a court in Iqaluit on Monday during the sentencing hearing for his onetime tormentor. “It makes me angry.”

Eric Dejaeger, a defrocked Oblate priest, was convicted last fall for 32 sex crimes ranging from indecent assault to bestiality against Inuit children. A long lineup of his former victims, who were children between 1978 and 1982 when the assaults occurred, are finally getting their chance to tell Dejaeger what he did to them in a two-day hearing which began under heavy security.

More than a dozen people were expected to testify on Monday, including the man haunted by that odour.

Dejaeger left him with lingering medical and mental problems, he said. He said he lost his job in Igloolik last year because Dejaeger’s trial upset him so much he couldn’t function.

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

Nunavut court: After nearly four decades, Dejaeger’s victims have their say

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

JIM BELL

After waiting nearly four decades, more than two dozen middle-aged Inuit sexual abuse victims from Igloolik and Kugaaruk filed into an Iqaluit courtroom Jan. 19 to begin describing how ex-priest Eric Dejaeger scarred their hearts and deformed their lives.

“Sometimes I would take showers to get the dirt off, the shame and dirty feelings, but I couldn’t get it off me,” one woman told the court, weeping as she spoke.

Dejaeger, 67, a former Oblate missionary, is guilty of 32 sex crimes against Inuit children he molested between 1976 and 1982

He entered guilty pleas to eight of those in November 2013. Following a long trial that ran from Nov. 18, 2013 until May 28, 2014, Justice Robert Kilpatrick of the Nunavut Court Justice found him guilty on 24 charges.

That included many counts of indecent assault on boys and girls, four counts of buggery, one count of bestiality with a dog, one count of forcible confinement, and one count of sexual assault.

Lawyers returned to court this week to start a lengthy sentencing hearing that began with numerous victim impact statements, most of them from Igloolik residents who flew to Iqaluit.

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

Former priest and school principal…

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Former priest and school principal has appeal against conviction for sexually abusing boy rejected by Court of Appeal

Ruaidhrí Giblin
PUBLISHED
19/01/2015

A former priest and school principal has had his appeal against conviction for sexually abusing a pupil rejected by the Court of Appeal.

Con Desmond, (79), with an address as Woodlands, Kilrush Road, Ennis, Co Clare, had pleaded not guilty to 13 counts of indecently assaulting a boy at St Stephen’s De La Salle National School in Waterford between 1978 and June 1980.

He was found guilty by a jury at Waterford Circuit Criminal Court and sentenced to two years imprisonment on each count to run concurrently by Judge Donagh McDonagh on February 19 2013.

Desmond’s appeal against conviction, on grounds of delay and conflicting evidence, was rejected by the Court of Appeal today.

Giving background to the case President of the Court of Appeal Mr Justice Seán Ryan said the first incident occurred sometime in January 1978 when the boy who was aged eight at the time had gotten very wet cycling to school.

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.

Sentencing hearing starts in Iqaluit for Arctic priest guilty of sex abuse

CANADA
Bay Today

The Canadian Press

IQALUIT, Nunavut — A sentencing hearing for a defrocked priest convicted of dozens of horrific sex crimes against Inuit children has started under heavy security.

Observers at the hearing for Eric Dejaeger must pass through a metal detector and have their bags searched if they want to enter the courtroom, a highly unusual move for Iqaluit courts.

Victim impacts statements are expected to take two days.

Dejaeger was convicted on 32 counts of various child sex-abuse crimes ranging from indecent assault to bestiality dating back to the 1970s and ’80s in Igloolik, Nunavut.

Victims are blaming Dejaeger for a wide variety of lingering physical and mental scars.

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.

Has the Government “pared back” what was promised to Magdalene survivors?

IRELAND
Yahoo! News

By Aoife Barry | TheJournal.ie

The government has been accused of paring back what was promised to survivors of the Magdalene Laundries.

Justice for Magdalenes Research (JFMR), the National Women’s Council of Ireland, the Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL) and Amnesty International (Ireland) have come together today to call on the government to implement all of Mr Justice John Quirke’s recommendations for a Magdalene restorative justice scheme.

Criticism

Taoiseach Enda Kenny apologised to Magdalene survivors on 19 February 2013.

Criticising the Redress for Women Resident in Certain Institutions Bill 2014, Maeve O’Rourke of JFMR described it as ”an obvious and unacceptable paring back of what the government promised as part of the women’s redress package”.

She said that the Bill “promises little more than the regular medical card, which most of the women already have”.

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.

Outrage expressed at provisions of Magdalene Bill

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Mon, Jan 19, 2015

The draft legislation to assist survivors of Magdalene laundries has been described as unacceptable, unfair and full of broken promises” by advocacy groups.

Advocates for the women say the Bill published last month represents an unacceptable paring back of what the Government promised as part of the women’s redress package.

After Taoiseach Enda Kenny’s apology to the Magdalene women last year, Mr Justice John Quirke was tasked with designing a restorative justice scheme, which the Government accepted.

The Redress for Women Resident in Certain Institutions Bill, published last month, proposes the women be entitled to GP care, prescription medicines, nursing and home-help as well as dental, ophthalmic, aural, counselling, chiropody and physiotherapy services provided by the HSE.

‘Paring back’

This was described at the press conference as “an obvious and unacceptable paring back” on what Justice Quirke recommended, as well as possibly being open to legal challenge.

It was also claimed that of approximately €60 million allocated for spending on redress for the woman, just €18 million had been spent so far.

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.

Churchgoers Brace After Archdiocese’s Chapter 11 Filing

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) – Following the news that the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has filed for bankruptcy, dozens of parishes across the Twin Cities are now bracing for the worst.

Archbishop John Nienstedt made the announcement on Friday. He claimed filing for Chapter 11 reorganization would not hurt local churches.

About 50 have hired bankruptcy attorneys.

The archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in the face of dozens of claims of clergy sexual abuse.

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