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.

May 7, 2015

‘Monsignor Meth’ gets 65 months in jail

CONNECTICUT
CT News

Monsignor Kevin Wallin has been sentenced to 65 months in prison for dealing crystal meth, the highly addictive drug made famous on TV’s “Breaking Bad.”

Senior U.S. District Judge Alfred V. Covello handed down the sentence Thursday in Hartford.

“This was an incredible fall from grace for a highly respected monsignor who was well loved in the Catholic community,” said Ed Gavin, a devout Catholic and Bridgeport criminal defense lawyer who has represented people facing mandatory minimums.. “All the good things he did as a religious leader were washed away in a very, very short period of time.”

As a priest, Wallin was an inspiration to his clergy. He led fundraisers to renovate both St. Peter’s Church in Danbury and later St. Augustine Cathedral in Bridgeport. His beautiful voice, nimble piano-playing and love for Broadway show tunes garnered headline status on parish variety-show fundraisers.

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 did the German bishops fail to raise their voice against the Nazis?

UNITED KINGDOM
Catholic Herald

by Francis Phillips posted Thursday, 7 May 2015

Bishops deferred to authority and priests and seminarians mainly followed suit. The lesson? That we must always speak out when our conscience is challenged

Anniversaries are crowding in on us this year: it is 70 years since the end of the Second World War; the anniversary of the liberation of Dachau concentration camp was last week; VE Day is tomorrow. All this alongside the general election today. Are all these events linked? Yes, in a way. We are not facing the German elections of 1933, but it is worth remembering that Hitler was voted into power – it wasn’t a Nazi putsch. Voting, or registering “None of the above”, does matter, as Fr Lucie-Smith argued yesterday. How should a Christian vote? Hard to say – though it’s worth noting that the Greens would like to shrink the number of people on the planet and that Ukip is the only party that has included Christianity in its manifesto.

These thoughts follow on from a book I have struggled to read this week; struggled because the topic makes for very gloomy reading. It’s called Wehrmacht Priests: Catholicism and the Nazi War of Annihilation (US, UK) by Lauren Faulkner Rossi and Catholics ought to read it, if only to ask themselves where their ultimate loyalties lie: with their faith or with their country? St Thomas More is famously said to have stated before his execution: “I die the King’s good servant, but God’s first.” It seems this maxim was forgotten or neglected by the German Catholic Church during the whole of the Third Reich.

The author makes it clear she thinks this period was a shameful episode for the Church in Germany. Basically, there was simply no collective or sustained resistance to Nazism on the part of the hierarchy. Their “silence” might have been due to their patriotic feeling, shared by almost all the population, that the Treaty of Versailles was deeply unfair; their mistaken belief that the real enemy to be fought was Bolshevism and thus that Nazism was the lesser evil; and their further mistaken attempt to distinguish between the German army (good) and the Nazi ideology (bad). It is also true that the German hierarchy did not raise its voice to protest about the treatment of the Jews, even though this was being carried on underneath its nose. A latent anti-Semitism was no doubt an influence here, just as it also affected the general population.

In this account there was only one bishop who consistently and courageously spoke out against the Nazi party throughout their 12-year regime: this was Konrad von Preysing, Bishop of Berlin; indeed he did more; with the help of a lay assistant, Margarete Sommer, he did his best to help the plight of the Jews in Berlin. Bishop Clemens von Galen of Munster did protest against the euthanasia programme (although he left it until 1941), but his voice was not representative of the German hierarchy as a whole.

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.

Hush Fund Set Up by Top SGM Leaders to Meet the Demands of a SGM Pastor Whose Son Was Sexually Abused

UNITED STATES
Brent Detwiler

Monday, March 30, 2015

Two years ago a “hush fund” masquerading as a benevolence fund was deceptively set up by Mark Prater (Executive Director for SGM), Paul Buckley (Chairman of the SGM Board), and Tommy Hill (Director of Finance & Administration for SGM) in order to surreptitiously meet the demands of a SGM pastor whose son was sexually abused by the son of another SGM pastor in the same church.

The fund came about because the father of the victim was thinking about joining the sex abuse lawsuit against SGM if SGM did not agree to reforms and if he did not receive restitution monies from SGM for harms done. Insurance lawyers told SGM leaders they would lose their liability coverage if payouts were made thereby arguably admitting fault. Instead, SGM lawyer Chip Grange suggested a plan whereby monies be raised for the victim’s family as “a collection and private gift to help him avoid eviction.” This plan was approved by C.J. Mahaney and the SGM Board of Directors and implemented by Mark Prater.

As a result many SGM pastors who knew the pastor and father of the victim were contacted and asked to give benevolence to the family. Prater, Buckley, Hill and the Board deceived these pastors into giving personal and church monies to a benevolence fund that effectively functioned as a hush fund. The pastors had no idea what was really going on behind the scenes. They were intentionally deceived in the matter.

People inside and outside of SGM must come to grips with the corruption that characterizes the leadership of SGM starting with C.J. Mahaney. He was the President of SGM when this hush fund was set up. No one should be supporting or following any of these men. As I’ve demonstrated countless times, you cannot believe anything they tell you.

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.

German Bishops Extend LGBT Welcome to Church Workers in New Policy

GERMANY
New Ways Ministry

Germany’s bishops voted in favor of new employment policies favorable to church workers in same-gender relationships this week, proving that the firing and forced resignation of LGBT church workers need not be the only response to marriage equality’s spread.

More than two-thirds of dioceses voted to approve the ecclesial policy change which allows church workers in same-sex unions, as well as those who have remarried after divorce, to keep their jobs, reports Reuters. Cardinal Rainer Woelki of Cologne explained the policy further:

” ‘The point is to limit the consequences of remarriage or a same-sex union to the most serious cases (that would) compromise the Church’s integrity and credibility.’ “

Though German courts have been limiting the scope of religious exemptions, churches are still free to disregard civil law when it comes to employment protections, meaning the bishops also chose this option fairly freely. Germany’s bishops explained that “multiple changes in legal practice, legislation and society” prompted the change. Such honesty about rapid shifts in public support for LGBT rights and the emerging reality of marriage equality, as well as the harm these firings cause, is rare.

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.

Bishops “Crime Wave”? Will Any Of Them Serve Time? Why Not ?

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Is there one criminal law for childless bishops and another for lesser Catholic Church officials and non-clerics who endanger or harm innocent children? Two different standards appear to be the case so far.

An Australian Archbishop pleads not guilty to criminally concealing a predatory priest’s child abuse. A Belgian Archbishop is judicially determined to have behaved similarly with a predatory priest he supervised. He may retire. A KC USA bishop, in effect, pleads guilty to similar charges and resigns after four years.

A defrocked 66 year old Polish Archbishop, who has been found, it appears, by the Vatican to have sexually abused minors in the Dominican Republic, may die of old age in a comfortable Vatican residence before the Vatican even begins his secretive trial.

Why are any of these bishop misdeeds tried in biased church courts? Why are bishops not being convicted and imprisoned for misdeeds that lesser officials and ordinary citizens are imprisoned for? How can an estimated hundreds of thousands of children worldwide been abused by priests, yet no bishop is really being held accountable to the full extent of the law?

In Philadelphia, where Pope Francis will soon honor the local Catholic hierarchy with a visit, Msgr. William Lynn, who had overseen more than 800 priests as former top priest personnel aide for a dozen years to the Philly Archdiocese’s Cardinals Justin Rigali and Anthony Bevilacqua and the first Catholic Church non-bishop senior official convicted in the clergy sex-abuse scandal, was recently order returned to prison, following a higher court ruling, by Teresa Sarmina, a judge educated at the Jesuit’s Georgetown Law and at Notre Dame’s St. Mary’s. “Well, I think things are back where they were when I sentenced Msgr. Lynn,” Sarmina said. “The same reasons I stated then exist.” “Somebody call for a sheriff,” the judge added, before leaving the bench. She had lectured Lynn on his failure to stand up to his cardinal bosses, who got off with impunity and Vatican honors, as did shamed Boston Cardinal Bernard Law before them.

Too bad no one earlier called the sheriff on Lynn’s cardinal bosses. Both cardinals managed to avoid prosecution for their aide’s misdeeds done apparently on their behalf. Bevilacqua died soon after giving a two day video deposition (that is still being kept secret, it appears) in the Lynn criminal case, and Rigali left town in a hurry, by “retiring” after Lynn’s indictment. He may now be seen in good form with Pope Francis attending Vatican ceremonies along with his former pal, the infamous Cardinal Law. The pope likely knew Bevilacqua from their Vatican committee work and appears to be personally acquainted with Rigali. Apparently failing to supervise priest predators of children is not an impediment to being honored at the Vatican.

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.

Long-serving Tasmanian Anglican Bishop John Harrower retires

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The 11th Anglican Bishop of Tasmania, John Harrower, has announced his retirement after 15 years in the job.

Bishop Harrower will formally leave the position on September 12.

He said it was time for him to bring his leadership of the church to a close.

“It seemed like 15 years was a good innings and we’ve absolutely enjoyed the time here,” Bishop Harrower said.

“There have been exciting times and there have been challenging times too.

“The issue of sexual abuse in the church and seeking to understand and being taught and helped by survivors of abuse to understand what really happened, and then to seek to respond in love and to walk with them in some way.”

Bishop Harrower said he took the issue of sexual abuse at the hands of priests very seriously from the moment he took office.

“[I made] an apology, in my very first media conference as Bishop of Tasmania, to survivors, victims of sexual abuse,” he said.

“And then way back in 2002, 13 years ago, I called for a Royal Commission.”

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 sets November hearing on archdiocese reorganization

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

By Annysa Johnson of the Journal Sentinel

The judge in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy has scheduled a November hearing on the church’s reorganization plan, now being revised, that if approved would allow it to emerge from its 4-year-old bankruptcy.

Attorneys for the archdiocese told U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Susan V. Kelley that the church will be putting more money from its disputed now $66 million cemetery trust into the bankruptcy estate in response to a recent decision by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.

They did not specify a dollar figure or say how much would go to attorneys vs. victims of clergy sexual abuse.

Other legal battles loom before any reorganization plan can be approved. Among them, whether Kelley has jurisdiction to grant parishes a blanket protection against future lawsuits — a key provision of the archdiocese’s plan — and whether the archdiocese must provide its creditors committee with additional documents involving the cemetery trust.

“Is there any middle ground here?” a clearly frustrated Kelley asked the nearly 20 attorneys assembled, some by telephone, for a contentious status hearing on Wednesday. “We need to move this case forward,” she said.

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

This “know-nothing” archbishop was put in charge of managing the church’s response to child-abuse crimes

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (a background article, written in 2010, still relevant in 2015)

A prominent Australian Catholic Church leader, Archbishop Philip Wilson, has claimed (in 2010) that during his rise from junior priest to church administrator, he “knew nothing” about the sexually-abusive behaviour of fellow-priests — even though he lived and worked with some of these criminals. Does Wilson’s “know-nothing” attitude help us to understand his rise to the top of the Australian church hierarchy? Wilson’s senior roles eventually included the managing of the church’s response to clergy sexual abuse.

From 1996 onwards, Wilson was a long-time member of the Australian bishops’ National Committee for Professional Standards — the body that was established to oversee the management of the church’s sexual-abuse crisis.

In 2001, Wilson’s fellow bishops elected him as the chairman of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference — at a time when the worldwide Catholic hierarchy was being accused of having covered up clergy sex-abuse crimes. He held this top position for the next ten years.

This career rise is quite significant for someone who says he formerly “knew nothing” about clergy sex crimes.

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.

Un preot român din Canada a agresat sexual ZECE FEMEI şi le-a ameninţat cu blesteme

CANADA
Romania TV

Un preot ortodox român a recunoscut că a agresat sexual 10 femei, în timpul spovedaniei sau al slujbelor.

Ioan Pop, în vârstă de 56 de ani, a încercat şi să sechestreze şi să întreţină relaţii sexuale cu o femeie, pe care a ameninţat-o apoi că o va blestema dacă spune cuiva ce i s-a întâmplat, potrivit România TV.

Preotul este judecat în prezent pentru aceste fapte, petrecute între 1999 și 2013. Potrivit procurorilor, victimele aveau între 20 şi 35 de ani. Identităţile lor nu au fost făcute publice.

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 exploited position to sexually assault women

CANADA
Toronto Sun

BY SAM PAZZANO, TORONTO SUN
FIRST POSTED: WEDNESDAY, MAY 06, 2015

TORONTO – A disgraced Romanian Orthodox priest has admitted to sexually assaulting 10 women, exploiting his position to victimize them in church, during confessions and in other places.

Ioan Pop, 56, used his holy position to fondle, kiss and make unwanted sexual advances at women from April 1, 1999 through September 2013. The assaults occurred while victims were seeking religious services such as confessions, weddings and funerals.

Pop also tried to confine, seduce and spark an affair with a despondent woman in 1999. He vowed to curse her and her family for generations if she exposed him, court heard.

Pop pleaded guilty to seven sexual assault charges but he also admitted the facts on three other allegations. Those facts can then be weighed by the judge as an aggravating factor on sentencing, which could result in a more severe sentence.

Crown attorney Jackie Garrity read out the disturbing facts to Justice Peter Hryn.

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

Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide pleads not guilty to concealing child abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MAY 07, 2015

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

The Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide, Philip Wilson, did not appear in court this morning to face a charge of concealing child abuse committed by another priest.

His lawyer, Simon Buchen, said the archbishop is pleading not guilty to the alleged offence and hopes to apply for the case to be moved from the court in Newcastle, in the NSW Hunter Valley, to Sydney.

“There is a plea and I enter the plea of not guilty,” Mr Buchen told the court.

Today’s hearing was the first time the matter has been heard in court since Archbishop Wilson was charged in March this year. He is the most senior Catholic official worldwide to be charged for concealing child abuse.

Court documents show the alleged abuse of a 10-year-old boy was committed by a Hunter Valley priest, James Patrick Fletcher, in 1971. Archbishop Wilson has been charged with concealing the abuse between 2004 and 2006, when he was serving as the Archbishop of Adelaide.

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

Archbishop Philip Wilson pleads not guilty to concealing child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

May 7, 2015

Gabriel Wingate-Pearse

Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson has pleaded not guilty to concealing child sex abuse in the Catholic church via his lawyer in Newcastle Local Court on Thursday.

Archbishop Wilson, who did not appear, was represented by barrister Simon Buchen, who said his client was pleading not guilty and he was anticipating a lengthy hearing.

He flagged with Magistrate Robert Stone there may be an application to “change the venue”.

One issue was the possible length of any hearing but Mr Buchen alluded to other issues which he did not specify.

“That’s not the only reason,” he said.

Mr Stone said he could make an application but if a magistrate could be made available at Newcastle, if that was where most witnesses were located, it may not be granted.

The prosecution asked for six weeks to prepare the brief of evidence to be served by June 3, reply on June 17, when Archbishop Wilson, who is not on bail, would again be excused from attending.

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.

Adelaide Archbishop pleads not guilty

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

[with video]

Adelaide’s Catholic Archbishop has pleaded not guilty to a charge of concealing child sexual abuse committed by a colleague.

Archbishop Philip Wilson was charged in March with one count of concealing information about a serious indictable offence, namely the 1971 sex assault of a 10-year-old boy by priest James Fletcher in Maitland in NSW.

Wilson was excused from appearing today at Newcastle Local Court, but his lawyer says he’s pleading not guilty.

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.

Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker addresses priest’s claims in Bishop Finn resignation

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KSHB

[with video]

Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker fired back after Fr. Gregory Lockwood wrote a letter to his parish at Christ the King Church claiming charges against the now-resigned Bishop Robert Finn were politically motivated.

Baker sent a letter to the temporary Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese leader Archbishop Joseph Naumann and Christ the King parish.

In it, she says Fr. Lockwood is spreading lies about her and Bishop Finn.

“As your prosecutor, I am guided by this truth: No one is above the law, no matter our position or title. Children especially need this to be true, and abused children’s lives may depend upon it,” Baker wrote.

She also said everyone has a moral duty to report abuse.

Bishop Finn was convicted in 2012 for failing to report suspected child abuse by another priest. He stepped down as diocese leader in April.

Fr. Lockwood blames Finn’s critics, not the scandal, for his resignation. He claimed Finn pleaded no contest to the charges to prevent a painful, public trial.

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.

War of words ensues following Bishop Finn’s resignation

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Fox 4

[with video]

MAY 7, 2015, BY FOX 4 NEWSROOM

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — In a letter to his parishioners, a Kansas City priest defends Bishop Robert Finn and lashes out at the Jackson County prosecutor for charging him with failing to report a priest who had child pornography.

Father Gregory Lockwood at Christ the King Parish wrote a two page letter about Bishop Finn’s resignation.

In it, he says the resignation is no cause for celebration, calling out fellow Catholics who support it and for saying “mean and vicious things.”

He went on to question why, “there is no forbearance or forgiveness for this man who pled no contest to a politically motivated charge filed by an ambitious prosecutor…”

Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker saw the letter and wrote her own to Christ the King Parish to address what she calls “misstatements.”

“I run this office as a prosecutor,” she wrote, “not a politician; and seeks convictions for people who harm our community.

She went on to say Bishop Finn did not plead no contest, but a judge found him guilty of the charge against 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.

Suspended Catholic priest seeks leniency in sentencing on guilty plea to distributing meth

CONNECTICUT
Fox News

May 07, 2015

Associated Press

HARTFORD, Conn. – A suspended Roman Catholic priest who pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess and distribute methamphetamine and bought a sex shop to possibly launder his drug money is asking a federal judge for leniency at his sentencing Thursday in Connecticut.

Monsignor Kevin Wallin, whose lawyer says was lonely and overworked when he turned to drugs and became an addict, agreed as part of his 2013 guilty plea to a possible prison sentence of 10 to 11 years. He’s now asking for four years in prison and 500 hours of community service.

The 63-year-old priest has been incarcerated for the past two years.

Prosecutors say he headed the meth distribution conspiracy, and they are seeking a sentence of at least 10 years, which they say is appropriate for the crime.

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.

Payout for abuse victims ‘deeply flawed’

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

AIMEE GULLIVER

Advocates for child abuse victims say the Government’s plan to “fast-track” payouts for people alleging historic abuse in state care is deeply flawed and underfunded.

The historic abuse claims relate to sexual, physical, and psychological abuse or neglect of children while they were in a wide range of social welfare, health, education and church-run homes, as well as foster care and family homes.

The claims involved a wide range of allegations from people who had been in state care, covering a 70-year period, with most between the 1960s and 1980s.

The Ministry of Social Development has received 1572 claims since 2004, with payouts totalling $8.4 million awarded in the 583 cases resolved so far – an average of just under $14,500 per case.

Social Development Minister Anne Tolley said the average time taken to resolve a claim was more than two years, and people with unresolved claims would be given the option of a “fast-track settlement”.

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.

Belgian primate ordered to pay damages to abuse victim

BELGIUM
The Tablet (UK)

06 May 2015

The Archbishop Brussels, André-Joseph Léonard, has been ordered to pay €10,000 in damages for failing to act on allegations of sexual abuse in the 1990s when he was bishop of Namur. The civil case was brought by a former seminarian who was abused by a priest in the late 1980s,when he was a 14-year-old altar boy.

Joel Devillet, now 42, filed an abuse complaint with a church tribunal, but it advised counselling for him and did not alert the police, said an appeals court in Liege that overturned an earlier judgment exonerating Léonard.

It also said Léonard, who is head of the Belgian bishops’ conference, did not discipline the offending priest, who went on to commit further abuse in another parish. “The way in which Archbishop Léonard treated the case of Joel Devillet constituted misconduct,” the court said.

Archbishop Léonard’s lawyer said his client disagreed with the court judgment but had not yet decided whether he would appeal. “The court lists various things that certain people should have done, but nothing that Archbishop Léonard categorically should have done,” he said. “That nuance is important.”

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.

Hibbing Priest Accused of Sexual Misconduct with Minor

MINNESOTA
KSTP

A Hibbing priest is in jail, facing allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor, KSTP sister-station WDIO reports.

The 29-year-old was arrested Tuesday afternoon by the Hibbing Police Department and is being held in the St. Louis County Jail. A formal charge has not yet been filed, but documents indicate he faces a potential charge of second-degree criminal sexual conduct involving his position of authority and a victim under the age of 16.

The Diocese of Duluth says the man is a parochial vicar at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Hibbing. The sign at Immaculate Conception Church in Hibbing also lists him as being an associate pastor at that church.

“While the circumstances leading to his arrest are currently unknown to us and while we believe (the man) is entitled to the presumption of innocence, we take this development very seriously and are monitoring it closely,” the diocese said in a statement.

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

Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson pleads not guilty …

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson pleads not guilty to concealment of child sex abuse charges

Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson has pleaded not guilty to charges of concealing child sex abuse.

The charges relate to abuse allegedly committed by fellow priest Jim Fletcher when the pair worked at NSW’s Maitland Diocese in the 1970s.

Court documents reveal the concealment charges involve the case of a 10-year-old boy allegedly abused in 1971.

Fletcher was convicted of nine sexual abuse charges in 2006.

He died shortly after being sentenced to at least seven and a half years for his crimes.

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

Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson pleads not guilty …

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson pleads not guilty to abuse cover-up at Newcastle hearing

NEIL KEENE THE DAILY TELEGRAPH MAY 07, 2015

ARCHBISHOP Philip Wilson has pleaded not guilty to covering up sexual abuse in the Catholic Church dating back to the 1970s.

The Archbishop of Adelaide — the highest-ranking member of the church anywhere in the world to be charged with concealing child sex abuse within Catholic ranks — did not appear for this morning’s brief hearing in Newcastle local court.

The court heard that Wilson would plead not guilty to the charge laid in March following investigations by Strike Force Lantle, established to investigate allegations of child sex abuse within the Catholic Church in the Hunter Region during the 1970s.

Police allege Wilson was a junior priest in the region in 1976 when he failed to alert authorities after learning of another priest’s abuse of a child.

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

Archbishop Philip Wilson will plead not guilty to hiding child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Australian Associated Press
Wednesday 6 May 2015

The Catholic archbishop of Adelaide will plead not guilty to a charge of concealing child sexual abuse.

Philip Wilson, 64, has been charged with one count of concealing information about a serious indictable offence, namely the 1971 sex assault of a 10-year-old boy by a former priest, James Patrick Fletcher, in Maitland in the NSW Hunter region.

Wilson was excused from appearing on Thursday at Newcastle local court.

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.

Adelaide Catholic Archbishop Philip Wilson pleads not guilty to concealing child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Dan Cox

Adelaide’s Catholic Archbishop Philip Wilson has pleaded not guilty to concealing child sexual abuse allegations against a paedophile priest.

Wilson was not in court today but he was represented by his lawyer, Simon Buchen.

Police allege that between 2004 and 2006, Wilson concealed a child sexual abuse allegation that had been made against the late Hunter Valley paedophile priest Jim Fletcher.

Court documents say Wilson believed Fletcher had indecently assaulted a 10-year-old boy in 1971, and knew he had information which might help with Fletcher’s prosecution.

The documents say, without reasonable excuse, Wilson failed to bring that information to the attention of police.

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

Archbishop pleads not guilty to concealing child abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Sun Daily

SYDNEY: An archbishop in the Australian city of Adelaide, Philip Wilson, pleaded not guilty in court Thursday to concealing child abuse in the Catholic Church, media reports said.

Police allege that Wilson concealed a child sexual abuse allegation made against a fellow priest in the 1970s when Wilson was an assistant parish priest in the east Australian town of Maitland.

Wilson is one of the most senior Catholic clerics in the world to be charged with concealing child abuse.

The defendant did not appear in court himself but was represented by his lawyer Simon Buchen, the Newcastle Herald newspaper reported.

The court adjourned the case until June 17.

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.

Hibbing priest arrested, suspected of sex with minor

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

Forum News Service
POSTED: 05/06/2015

HIBBING, Minn. — A Hibbing priest has been arrested on suspicions of having sex with a minor.

The Rev. Brian Lederer, 29, a priest of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Duluth, was arrested in Hibbing on Tuesday as a result of allegations of sexual misconduct, according to a news release from the diocese office.

Lederer was in the St. Louis County Jail in Duluth on Wednesday on preliminary charges of second-degree felony criminal sexual conduct with a person between ages 13 and 15 by a person of authority.

Hibbing police said they could not comment on the case because it remains an active investigation and that a criminal complaint is expected to be filed in court Thursday or Friday.

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.

May 6, 2015

Kansas City priest defends Finn, alleges ulterior motive in bishop’s prosecution

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

[The Father Lockwood letter]
[Letter from Jean Peters Baker, prosecutor]

Brian Roewe | May. 6, 2015 NCR Today

KANSAS CITY, MO.
A priest’s letter alleging political motivations for the prosecution of Bishop Robert Finn prompted responses Wednesday from both the local prosecutor and the apostolic administrator of the Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., diocese.

Fr. Gregory Lockwood, parochial administrator of Christ the King Parish in southern Kansas City and a close friend of Finn, said while mistakes occurred in the case of former priest Shawn Ratigan, currently serving 50 years in prison for child pornography, he questioned the legal process that led to Finn’s 2012 misdemeanor conviction.

Finn resigned April 21 as head of the diocese, with Kansas City, Kan., Archbishop Joseph Naumann named as its administrator. In October 2011, Finn and the diocese were charged with failure to report suspected child abuse in relation to Ratigan, who pled guilty in 2012 on federal charges of possessing and producing child pornography. In September 2012, a Jackson County judge found Finn guilty on one misdemeanor count of failing to report.

“There were definitely mistakes made in handling the situation by people who, it turned out, were in over their heads, but there was never any malice, or impulse to cover up anything,” Lockwood said in a letter inserted in the weekend bulletin addressed to Christ the King parishioners.

He continued: “There is no forbearance or forgiveness for this man who pled no contest to a politically motivated charge filed by an ambitious prosecutor with strong ties to the abortion industry, so that he might save his local church the pain and cost of a public trial. The statute used was not even applicable to what happened, but such is our legal and political society.”

The accusation of ulterior motives led Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker, who brought the charges against Finn, to respond by saying Lockwood’s letter contained “misinformation” and “misstatements.”

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.

Hibbing priest arrested on suspicion of sexual misconduct with minor

MINNESOTA
Northlands News Center

By Newsroom Staff

Updated May 6, 2015

Hibbing, MN (NNCNOW.com) — A priest with the Diocese of Duluth is in police custody, accused of sexual misconduct with a minor.

Police arrested the 29-year-old man in Hibbing on Tuesday.

The Diocese released a statement today saying they are taking the situation very seriously and are monitoring developments closely.

They add they will cooperate fully with the authorities.

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Hibbing priest arrested on suspicion of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran May 6, 2015

A Catholic priest who serves at a parish in Hibbing was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of sexually abusing a teenager, according to the Diocese of Duluth and law enforcement records.

The Hibbing Police Department booked the priest into the St. Louis County Jail, where he remains pending a possible charge for second-degree criminal sexual conduct with a minor between the ages of 13 and 15, according to the county jail roster.

The priest was ordained in the Diocese of Duluth. Diocese spokesman Kyle Eller said the diocese first learned of the arrest from the police. He declined further comment.

In a statement released Wednesday, the diocese said the priest was arrested “as a result of allegations of sexual misconduct of a minor.”

It continued, “While the circumstances leading to his arrest are currently unknown to us and while we believe (the priest) is entitled to the presumption of innocence, we take this development very seriously and are monitoring it closely.”

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.

Hibbing-based priest arrested; Accused of sexual misconduct with minors

MINNESOTA
Hibbing Daily Tribune

HDT Staff Report news@hibbingdailytribune.net

HIBBING — An associate pastor of Blessed Sacrament Parish in Hibbing has been arrested and is being held on suspicion of sexual misconduct.

Brian M. Lederer, 29, was arrested by the Hibbing Police Department and booked into the St. Louis County Jail Tuesday evening, according to the jail roster report.

He was being held with probable cause on an anticipated charge of felony criminal sexual conduct in the second degree.

Lederer was ordained in June 2012 and is parochial vicar at Blessed Sacrament Parish in Hibbing, the Diocese of Duluth confirmed in a statement Wednesday afternoon.

“While the circumstances leading to his arrest are currently unknown to us and while we believe Father Lederer is entitled to the presumption of innocence, we take this development very seriously and are monitoring it closely,” said Kyle Eller, director of communications for the Diocese of Duluth.

“We will cooperate fully with civil authorities in any investigation, and as more facts emerge in this case, we will uphold our responsibilities to civil law, to church law and under our policies and procedures for the protection of young people. We continue to pray for all those affected by sexual abuse and urge anyone who has been a victim of it to come forward to church authorities and to civil authorities.”

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Scomparsa nell’Aretino, rintracciato a Haiti il confratello indagato

ITALIA
Go News

Sarebbe stato rintracciato ad Haiti Padre Jean Baptiste, Padre Giovambattista come veniva chiamato a Ca Raffaello frazione del comune di Badia Tedalda (Arezzo) da dove un anno fa è scomparsa la 50enne Guerrina Piscaglia.

Il religioso, che sostituì la scorsa primavera il parroco padre Faustin quando questi si trovava in Africa, non è mai stato sentito dagli investigatori della procura di Arezzo dal momento che fu trasferito subito dopo la sparizione di Guerrina, denunciata nei primissimi giorni come probabile allontanamento volontario.

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Priest wanted for questioning in Piscaglia probe located

ITALY
Gazzetta del Sud

Arezzo, May 6 – A priest prosecutors want to question in connection with the disappearance last year of 50-year-old Guerrina Piscaglia has been located in Haiti, investigators said Wednesday. Father Jean Baptiste was transferred away from the parish of Badia Tedalda, near Arezzo, shortly after Pisascaglia vanished. Baptiste shared the rectory with Friar Gratien Alabi, who is in prison after being arrested in April on charges of murder and tampering with a corpse in the probe into Piscaglia’s disappearance. The housewife and mother of a 22-year-old son went to the rectory of the local church after a family lunch on the afternoon of May 1, 2014, and was never seen again. Extensive police searches using dogs conducted in the surrounding countryside failed to turn up any trace of Piscaglia, who lived in the hamlet of Ca’ Raffaello in Arezzo province. Prosecutors later placed Alabi, a Congolese national, under investigation on suspicion of kidnapping and possible murder after he told a TV show about missing persons that Piscaglia had told him she was pregnant and that he was the father.

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REV. STEVE WINGFIELD OF FLORISSANT

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

. . .Rev. Steve Wingfield of First Christian Church in Florissant has failed in his bid for a restraining order to make whistleblowers take down Facebook posts critical of how he handled the case of Brendon Millburn. Millburn, a former church staffer, is now behind bars for 25 years after admitting molesting boys. Barrister Al Johnson foiled Wingfield’s effort. Johnson’s no “newbie” with clergy sex cases. In the 1980s, he prosecuted Fr. Joseph Ross on child sex charges. .

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Former Granite City Priest Ousted Following Abuse Allegations

ILLINOIS
KMOX

Fred Bodimer (@FredBodimerKMOX)
May 6, 2015

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (KMOX) — Springfield Bishop Thomas Paprocki has removed Father Robert “Bud” DeGrand as pastor of four central Illinois parishes following a credible abuse allegation from 30 years ago.

DeGrand was at St. Elizabeth’s Parish in Granite City from 1991 to 1996.

Paprocki went to DeGrand’s most recent parishes in the Effingham area Sunday to give the news about their pastor’s removal.

“Paprocki said on Sunday that not only is (Degrand) suspended, but his pay has been reduced,” says David Clohessy of the Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP).

The case first surfaced in 2013 and has been going through the Vatican disciplinary process.

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Pope Facing Revolts In Germany, Chile & USA: Pope Needs A Complete Council, Not A Staged Synod, Now!

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

German Catholic bishops, clearly concerned about protecting their $7+ billion annual governmental subsidies (the Catholic Church’s largest guaranteed revenue stream worldwide, with roots in Pope Pius XII’s 1933 “evil bargain” that helped make Hitler), have apparently seen enough from Pope Francis and his flawed “fatherless and motherless” Family Synod farce. The Bishops appear unwilling to wait passively for the final Family Synod in October to reform their rules on same sex marriages and divorced and remarried Catholics. Who knows? German bishops, under considerable competitive pressure from Evangelical Lutherans and governmental child protection officials, may soon reverse the papal contraception ban and even (God willing!) hold German bishops really accountable for covering up priest child predators, as apparently even the ex-pope did in Munich and his brother did as the Regensburg choirmaster.

As reported by veteran Vatican journalist, Sandro Magister, ” … Not only do the German bishops approve of giving absolution and communion to the divorced and remarried, but they also express the hope that civil second marriages be blessed in church, that Eucharistic communion also be given to non-Catholic spouses, that the goodness of homosexual relationships and same-sex unions be recognized. …”, see here,

[Chiesa]

The German bishops are on a Synod collision course with the pope over sexual morality issues, see Yale educated prophetic theologian, Jamie Manson’s insightful and informative “To have a truly just church, Pope Francis must move beyond complementarity” here,

[National Catholic Reporter]

The collision is being accelerated by truth tellers on bishop cover-up schemes like courageous Fr. Tom Doyle in his recent “Bishop Robert Finn: the rest of the story” here,

[National Catholic Reporter]

Pope Francis’ failed Synod strategy has for two years sought, and still seeks:

* To protect cardinals and bishops from governmental investigators and criminal prosecutors
* To protect Church leaders’ assets from excessive corruption and from lawyers for priest sex abuse survivors
* To protect unaccountable bishops’ local monopolies over their dioceses and the local Catholic faithful
* To protect bishops’ key salesmen — their captive celibate priests who collect top Church leaders’ money and who depend on bishops’ funds to survive, especially in retirement
* To create an illusion, through public imagery and misleading promises, that the Vatican is changing its unchristian ways, as well as its warped sexual teachings that are designed mainly to preserve and protect the Church leaders’ power and wealth.

The German bishops see and understand well the future implications, it appears, of the Catholic revolt in Chile and the likely coming USA revolt when the pope visits in September. The USA revolt has already begun with brave Jesuit students at a New York university, with their petition here on Change.org (SIGN IT NOW PLEASE), and related anticipated civil disobedience seeking to reject, in light of evident child protection and homophobic failures, prominent New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan as graduation speaker, see here, Catholics Revolt: Jesuit Grads Shun Dolan As Goldman Sachs Bankers Woo Him

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Boston’s Catholic Church is Suing an 85-Year-Old Woman

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston.com

By Kristi Palma @kristipalma
Boston.com Staff | 05.06.15

Margaret O’Brien, 85, has been a parishioner at St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church in Scituate for 54 years.

She’s taught religious education at the parish and used to sing in the choir.

Now she’s being sued, along with other parishioners, by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston for trespassing on the property, reports The Boston Globe . Parishioners and representatives of the archdiocese faced off in Norfolk Superior Court Tuesday over the church, where members have kept vigil since the archdiocese closed it, nearly 11 years ago.

St. Frances Xavier Cabrini was one of dozens of churches the archdiocese decided to close after the clergy sex-abuse scandal affected Catholic church attendance and donations, according to the Globe. Parishioners in other parishes fought the closures initially but the Scituate church is the only one still fighting.

In June, the parishioners’ appeal to keep the church open was denied by the highest Vatican court. Parishioners were given a March 9 deadline to vacate the property. They did not.

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Philly priest uses fiction to break Catholic Church’s ‘wall of silence’

PENNSYLVANIA
Newsworks

“Prime Time” is a bi-weekly series featuring people over 50 in the Greater Philadelphia area who are taking on new challenges. They are starting new businesses, dedicating themselves to activism, and becoming a part of the change they wish to see. Email us to nominate someone.

It’s Father Paul F. Morrissey’s duty, as an Augustinian priest, to help relieve the pain and suffering of others. But what if the pain and suffering is within the Catholic Church itself? That is the central issue Morrissey addresses in his provocative novel, “The Black Wall of Silence.”

The cover shows a priest muffled by his own collar. “We are all muffled in some way, torn between loyalty and honesty,” says Morrissey who, like the central character of his novel, serves as a prison chaplain and spiritual director.

In his novel, a gay priest discovers that the Church’s cover-up of sexual abuse may result in a life sentence without parole for a victim.

“In the novel, I try to show the parallel between the Church and the prison system,” says Morrissey. “Bishops have protected the Church at all costs, even if it means, at times, relocating an admitted pedophile. To survive, whether in a prison or in the Church, you have to follow the loyalty ode or open yourself to retribution. In my novel, I attempt to pull back the curtain of silence on these issues.”

The conflict between Morrissey’s fictional priest and a bishop builds up this battle between honesty and loyalty in a courtroom climax. The novel’s main character, Father Zach, says, “If I remain silent about a problem in the prison or the Church, I’m rewarded for being a member of the team. But if I ask a question, I’m seen as a traitor.”

“Father Zach realizes he lives in two prisons — the Catholic Church, and Riker’s Island, where he serves as a prison chaplain,” says Morrissey, “This loyalty-versus-honesty theme is universal. Readers will be able to identify with the characters, whether they are Christian, Jewish or Muslim, because we all tend to censor ourselves in some way in order to fit in and be accepted. The question my books asks is: Can Catholics, or anyone, speak our truth, or must we hide?”

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KC priest criticizes prosecution of Bishop Robert Finn; prosecutor fires back

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

[The Father Lockwood letter]

[Letter from Jean Peters Baker, prosecutor]l

By JUDY L. THOMAS
jthomas@kcstar.com

As the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese tries to move past the resignation of Bishop Robert Finn, a priest has roiled the waters with a letter alleging that the criminal charges against Finn were politically motivated.

The prosecutor who filed the case, Jean Peters Baker, this week responded with a strongly worded letter of her own.

Her letter, sent Monday to Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas and to members of Christ the King Parish in Kansas City, said the document distributed last week by their pastor, the Rev. Gregory Lockwood, contained “misinformation” and “misstatements.”

“I run this office as a prosecutor, not a politician, and I have sought convictions for those who have harmed our community,” Baker wrote, adding that while everyone has a moral duty to report abuse, others are required by law to do so.

“Having the courage to stand up to those in power and hold dangerous criminals accountable for their behavior is a necessary component of the position of prosecutor,” she said. “…As your prosecutor, I am guided by this truth: no one is above the law, no matter our position or title. Children especially need this to be true, and abused children’s lives may depend upon it.”

Finn was convicted in September 2012 for failing to notify authorities about a priest who later pleaded guilty to production of child pornography. That priest, Shawn Ratigan, was sentenced to 50 years in federal prison and has since been removed from the priesthood.

Finn stepped down as leader of the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph on April 21, nearly three years after he became the most senior U.S. Roman Catholic prelate convicted of criminal charges related to the church’s child sexual abuse scandal. Neither Finn nor the Vatican provided a specific reason for the resignation, but the Vatican said that Finn cited the code of canon law that allows bishops to resign early for illness or some “grave” reason that makes them unfit for office.

Baker sent her letter by email to the parish and to Naumann, said Michael Mansur, spokesman for the prosecutor’s office. Naumann is serving as the diocese’s temporary leader until the Vatican names a replacement for Finn.

Mansur said Wednesday that Baker had not yet received any response. When asked why Baker took the extraordinary measure of writing to the parish and the archbishop, Mansur said, “I think the letter speaks for itself.”

Lockwood did not return a call requesting comment. Naumann responded in a statement on Wednesday:

“I am disheartened that some have chosen to respond to Bishop Finn’s resignation, not by moving forward, but to continue public attacks upon him and the Church,” Naumann said. “On the other hand, Father Gregory Lockwood and others have also passionately defended Bishop Finn. While everyone has a right to free expression, in my opinion it serves no good purpose at this point to rehash a story that has had so many tragic consequences. There is nothing to be gained by picking at old wounds and speaking uncharitably about one another.

“My prayer is that when the new Bishop arrives he will find a Catholic community united and eager to work with him in making the love of Jesus more alive and tangible in our community.”

In his letter, which was inserted into parish bulletins, Lockwood said that Finn was a longtime friend and that his resignation “comes after a long, bitter, nasty campaign by many of our brothers and sisters, who, for whatever reason, were convinced that he needed to go.”

Lockwood blamed Finn’s critics — not the Ratigan scandal — for the resignation. His letter highlighted a rift between conservative and progressive factions within the diocese that intensified when Finn became bishop in 2005.

“For the instigators of this unfortunate event, the issue was never the Ratigan affair,” Lockwood wrote. “There were definitely mistakes made in handling the situation by people who, it turned out, were in over their heads, but there was never any malice, or impulse to cover up anything.

“If this had happened on another, more popular bishop’s watch, the aftermath we have seen would not have occurred, because the motivation for the mob-scene that ensued was Bishop Finn’s fidelity to a classical concept of the church, not the cover-up of any misconduct.”

Lockwood said that those who were celebrating Finn’s resignation did so not because of the Ratigan case but because they viewed the bishop as an “arch-conservative.”

“One of the most disturbing things I have seen in my years as a priest is the glee and meanness of many of our brothers and sisters in the aftermath of Bishop Finn’s resignation,” he said. “Champagne corks popped, celebrations begun, more mean and vicious things said by people whose Lord Jesus said to them, ‘Love one another.’”

There was no forgiveness, Lockwood said, “for this man who pled no contest to a politically motivated charge filed by an ambitious prosecutor with strong ties to the abortion industry, so that he might save his local church the pain and cost of a public trial.”

The statute under which Finn was charged, Lockwood said, “was not even applicable to what happened, but such is our legal and political society.”

He told parishioners that “we have become mean, low and self-involved.”

“No one has won anything here; we’ve all lost,” he said. “An honorable man has been unjustly disgraced, and we have sacrificed his dignity and our own in a rush to punish and destroy…”

In her response, Baker said she was raised in the Catholic faith and attended Catholic schools run by nuns who “guided students by their own demonstration of accountability and commitment to our education.”

“My church parish was blessed with many talented priests,” she said, “but the notion that no one is above the law was infused in me by these strong women.”

Baker said Lockwood was “factually inaccurate” in saying that Finn pleaded no contest to the charge of failing to report suspicions of abuse.

“On September 6, 2012, a Jackson County Judge heard the facts of the case and found him guilty of that charge,” she wrote. “You should also be aware that on September 12, 2013, Shawn Ratigan, a former priest, was sentenced to 50 years in prison for related photographic images of children.”

Lockwood’s letter has created a stir as it has circulated throughout the diocese. Some parishioners and victims’ advocates were incensed at its tone and content and said it was insensitive to priest sex abuse victims.

“Look what it’s doing to the victims,” said Sister Jeanne Christensen, who served as the diocese’s victims’ advocate from 2000 to 2004. “To say Bishop Finn’s resignation had nothing to do with Ratigan? This victimizes them all over again.”

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Not-Getting-It Department (Episcopal Division)

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Phyllis Zagano | May. 6, 2015 Just Catholic

The saga continues. You may recall the bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo., judged guilty of knowingly failing to report suspected child sexual abuse, was sentenced to two years’ probation with conditions.

But when the bishop — Robert Finn — resigned last month, he had a few calendar items the high-ups approved: diaconal and priestly ordinations.

Say what?

Yes, it is true. The Not-Getting-It Department (Episcopal Division) met in person or in cyberspace and said to Finn: Sure, go ahead, ordain your deacons and priests.

Who, you ask? As it happened, Carlo Maria Vigano, the 74-year-old apostolic nuncio to the United States, gave the green light for Finn to do the ordinations. It was Finn’s friend, neighbor, and now administrator of Finn’s old diocese, Archbishop Joseph Naumann, who came up with the plan, citing scheduling conflicts preventing his doing the ordinations. In fact, Naumann has sent Finn the required permission letters for each ordination.

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Opvolger Léonard zal niet lang op zich laten wachten

BELGIE
De Standaard

[Archbishop Léonard has resigned resigns. His succession will probably go faster than with Danneels, who had to wait two years for a successor.]

Aartsbisschop Léonard neemt ontslag. Zijn opvolging zal wellicht een pak sneller gaan dan bij Danneels, die twee jaar moest wachten op een opvolger.

Woensdag wordt aartsbisschop André-Joseph Léonard 75 jaar en zoals het kerkelijk recht voorschrijft, biedt hij paus Franciscus dan zijn ontslag aan. Dat betekent niet dat Léonard onmiddellijk zijn functie neerlegt.

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Belgium–Victims urge Francis to oust Brussels archbishop

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, May 6

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

Today, Archbishop André-Joseph Leonard of Brussels is obligated to submit his resignation to Pope Francis. We hope he does so immediately and we hope Pope Francis accepts it immediately.

Last month, a court ordered Archbishop Leonard to pay €10,000 in damages to a child sex abuse victim, ruling that the Catholic official was responsible for a failure to act on abuse reports.

[Catholic Culture]

There is no reason for delay. Catholics in Brussels deserve a prelate who takes children’s safety more seriously than Archbishop Leonard has. Parents, police, prosecutors and parishioners would be reassured to see the pontiff replace Leonard quickly.

And Pope Francis should also publicly denounce Leonard. That’s what will make kids safer: when top Catholic officials find the courage to clearly, strongly and publicly criticize their colleagues who endanger children and protect predators.

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KY–Victims plead with new bishop: Warn your flock!

KENTUCKY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, May 6

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

Today is Lexington Bishop John Stowe’s first day in his new job. What could be more pressing than the safety of kids?

We call on him to immediately warn his flock about two local predator priests and to permanently post all child molesting clerics’ names on his diocesan website.

1—Fr. Carroll Howlin faces at least four child sex abuse allegations, but now lives – and likely still ministers – among poverty-stricken families in McCreary County with no supervision. It’s one of most reckless, disturbing and recent examples of how little church officials are doing to safeguard kids from known predators.

Recently-released church records show that prosecutors found the child sex allegations “credible” and “there was sufficient evidence to file criminal charges” but the statute of limitations prevented it.

[BishopAccountability.org]

Based on some of these records, the Chicago Tribune reported that “Church officials removed Howlin from public ministry, but otherwise left him alone in Kentucky (despite charges that) Howlin had used money to gain sexual favors from two impoverished teenage boys and had been engaging in ‘informal ministry on the side’ in Kentucky” (with a charity called “Hills and Hollers Ministries,” 606 376 7577).

In 2010, the Vatican banned him from unsupervised contact with children, but “he serves as his own minder here in rural Kentucky. The choice of whether to follow the Vatican’s restrictions involving ministry or being alone with children remains entirely up to him,” the Tribune found.

“Howlin is in fact still a Joliet Diocese priest who is supposed to answer to its bishop, according to both the Vatican and other experts. The diocese continues Howlin’s pension, and (his bishop) has the authority to dictate where Howlin lives. (But) records show church officials have done little to keep tabs on him,” the Tribune reported.

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MO–Accusations of cover up at North Co. Church; SNAP responds

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, May 6

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

A North County mega-church pastor is suing church members who say he did little or nothing to act on suspicions of child sex abuse by a now-imprisoned sex offender who worked at the church. Shame on the pastor and his top aides for lashing out at, and trying to intimidate, caring whistleblowers.

( See new Riverfront Times story:

[Riverfront Times]

We hope law enforcement is investigating the possibility that Rev. Steven Wingfield of First Christian Church in Florissant may have broken the law in the case of now-admitted child molester Brandon Milburn.

Even though he hasn’t been criminally charged, Wingfield has hired a lawyer. And he’s instructed that lawyer to sue compassionate adults whose only “crime” is trying to find and help Milburn’s victims and shed light on a disturbing truth – that some at First Christian could and should have done more and acted sooner to call prevent child sex abuse.

As horrific as this case is, there are some heroes here. They are the brave men, women and teenagers who have exposed and are exposing an allegedly complicit church hierarchy. They are Dawn and Roger Varvil, Titus and Kari Benton, Jacob and Carrie Anderson, Doug and Tammy Lay, Sarah Thiele, Nathan Rayner, Scott Seppelt, Adam Krause and Lisa Womble. (Some of these are pseudonyms.)

We applaud them for their strength, courage and caring. We are saddened by their suffering.

And we also are grateful to and impressed by the very brave teenagers and young men who helped police and prosecutors put Milburn away where he can’t hurt anyone else. It’s very hard for abuse victims to speak up. It’s harder when the perpetrator is a trusted religious figure. And it’s very hard to step forward at a young age and cooperate with the justice system. But these teenagers and young men have done this, at considerable risk, and ours is a safer community because of their courage.

We urge anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes by Milburn or cover ups at First Christian to summon the strength to call police and prosecutors. Though Milburn is behind bars, it’s possible that some who ignored or concealed suspicions of his crimes may face justice too.

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Priest indicted on tax charges, another investigated for missing funds

CALIFORNIA
Catholic Philly

BY CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE

SAN JOSE, Calif. (CNS) — A priest from the San Jose Diocese has been indicted on federal fraud and tax evasion charges and a priest from the Cincinnati Archdiocese is under investigation for missing parish funds.

Msgr. Hien Minh Nguyen, a priest from the San Jose Diocese was indicted on federal fraud and tax evasion charges for allegedly diverting thousands of dollars from parishioner donations into his own bank account during a three-year period.

The priest, former director of the Vietnamese Catholic Center for the Diocese of San Jose, was indicted by a federal grand jury in San Jose on bank fraud and tax evasion charges He was charged with 14 counts of bank fraud totaling $19,000 and for not reporting hundreds of thousands of dollars in income between 2008 and 2011.

In a statement, San Jose Bishop Patrick J. McGrath said the diocese has been cooperating with federal investigators since October 2012. The priest has been on a leave of absence since December 2013. He was arrested April 18.

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A Youth Minister’s Downfall Is Tearing First Christian Church of Florissant Apart

MISSOURI
Riverfront Times

By Danny Wicentowski Wed., May 6 2015

As he waits to face his victims, the former youth minister can do nothing but stare at his manacled hands. His piercing blue eyes barely move as St. Louis County Circuit Judge Robert Cohen adjudicates some half-dozen criminal cases — heroin possession, burglary, probation violations. An hour passes before Brandon Milburn’s name is called.

Milburn’s case is left for last. From the back of the courtroom, nineteen pairs of eyes turn to prosecutor Michael Hayes as he begins his argument for the stiffest possible sentence.

The date is March 30, 2015: two months since Milburn pleaded guilty to molesting two eleven-year-old boys; fourteen months since Milburn’s arrest; ten years since Milburn first set foot in St. Louis.

“Your Honor,” Hayes begins, “Mr. Milburn has plead guilty to the seven counts of statutory sodomy, first degree. These seven counts represent a pattern of abuse that took place over a period of years, from the summer of 2007 till the spring of [2009]. The defendant had ingratiated himself with the victims’ families and with the church that they all participated in.”

And Milburn’s pattern of abuse began even before that.

According to Hayes, the state had received information about three other victims in Milburn’s hometown of Louisville, Kentucky. Those molestations date back to 2000, when Milburn was in his early teens and the three boys in preschool. Hayes tells the judge that these earlier abuses spanned at least six years.

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Obispos chilenos admiten que crisis de confianza alcanza también a la Iglesia

CHILE
Hola Ciudad

[The Chilean Catholic bishops have published a document on the crisis of confidence plaguing the country and admitted that this also extends to the Church itself because of sexual abuse by “unscrupulous priests” today.]

Los obispos católicos chilenos divulgaron hoy un documento sobre la crisis de confianza que afecta al país y admitieron que esta situación alcanza también a la propia Iglesia a causa de los abusos sexuales cometidos por “curas inescrupulosos”.

Los obispos católicos chilenos divulgaron hoy un documento sobre la crisis de confianza que afecta al país y admitieron que esta situación alcanza también a la propia Iglesia a causa de los abusos sexuales cometidos por “curas inescrupulosos”.

“Es preocupante constatar la pérdida de confianza en las relaciones sociales y en los liderazgos: en la política, la empresa, la escuela, las universidades”, sostiene el texto, divulgado por el obispo Cristián Contreras, secretario general de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile.

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The cover-up is over for Christian Brother Maurie Howard

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher (updated 6 May 2015)

This Broken Rites article exposes the activities of Christian Brother Maurice Howard during his long teaching career in Victoria and Tasmania. In 2015, the Christian Brothers have been forced to give a written apology to at least one of Brother Howard’s many victims.

Brother Maurie Howard taught at many schools including: St Patrick’s College in Ballarat; St Kevin’s College in Toorak; Christian Brothers St Kilda; and St Virgil’s College in Hobart.

Maurice Andrew Howard was born in 1914. He is believed to have been a pupil at St Patrick’s College, Ballarat, in the late 1920s and early 1930s. He was recruited as a member of the Christian Brothers and he began teaching at schools in their Victoria-Tasmania province.

In the late 1940s, he was back at St Patrick’s College as a teacher — “Brother Howard”. He was one of the school’s main coaches for cricket and football.

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The church compensates some victims at Melbourne’s elite Xavier College

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher

Research by Broken Rites has uncovered some cases in which pupils have received compensation for clergy sexual abuse at one of Australia’s most “prestigious” Catholic schools — Melbourne’s Xavier College. This Broken Rites article contains four examples of Xavier cases.

Xavier College is owned by the Society of Jesus (known as the Jesuit religious order), which has inherited a “scholarly” public image.

Situated on a hill in Kew in Melbourne’s leafy east, Xavier College opened as a boys’ boarding school in 1878. In 1900 it was accepted into an association of Melbourne’s most “prestigious” non-Catholic grammar schools.

Xavier established preparatory schools in Kew (Burke Hall, 1920) and Brighton (Kostka Hall, 1936). The prep schools cover the primary grades to Year 8. After completing the secondary years, at the main campus, many Xavier boys have been channelled into the professions of medicine, law, the church and the public service, thus helping to promote Xavier’s elite image.

Here are some examples of church settlements regarding Xavier College :

Xavier example 1

One Xavier settlement relates to Father Patrick Stephenson, SJ , OBE, who was associated with Xavier College for more than fifty years (until 1991) as a teacher and as a mentor in the Old Xavierians’ Association. Being involved in the education of thousands of boys, he was perhaps the school’s most famous teacher, like Britain’s legendary “Mr Chips”, and was one of the most widely known Jesuits in the city of Melbourne. His OBE award (the Order of the British Empire) is an indication of his prominence in the general Melbourne community. The school has named a sports complex after him. He is now deceased.

A former student, who was at Xavier in the late 1960s and early 1970s, has complained to the Jesuits that Fr Paddy Stephenson, O.B.E., indecently mauled this boy’s genitals. This constitutes a criminal offence — indecent assault. This student says he was not the only victim. He (and other boys) reported Stephenson’s behaviour at the time to another Jesuit priest (a religious education teacher) but this Jesuit was dismissive and “didn’t want to know about it”. Evidently, the ex-student says, the Jesuits were concerned to protect the school’s image. Eventually, many years later, this ex-student has tackled the Jesuit authorities with an official complaint. The Jesuits have reached a confidential settlement with this ex-student, thereby still protecting the school’s image. And the school’s sports complex is still named in honour of the famous Fr Patrick Stephenson, OBE.

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No evidence of sex abuse by Father Paul Morton

SCOTLAND
BBC News

A Roman Catholic priest will not face any criminal charges over allegations of historical sexual abuse after police found no evidence to support the claim.

Father Paul Morton was suspended from St Bride’s parish in Cambuslang, South Lanarkshire, in October while police investigated a complaint against him.

The Diocese of Motherwell said it had been told no charges would be brought.

Fr Morton will not return to ministry until he is formally approved by a canonical counsel.

St Bride’s parish is part of the Diocese of Motherwell, headed by Bishop Joseph Toal.

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Women Secretly Videotaped By Local Rabbi Speaking Out

MARYLAND
CBS Baltimore

[with video]

Vic Carter

TOWSON, Md. (WJZ) — He was an influential religious leader and a respected and popular Towson University professor. But Rabbi Barry Freundel preyed on his female students, secretly videotaping them as they undressed for a ritual bath.

Vic Carter reports two of his victims are telling their stories on the ultimate betrayal of trust.

Rabbi Barry Freundel was a prominent spiritual leader and a respected Towson University professor.
He was also a master manipulator who lured women under the pretense of a religious cleansing ritual to get them to take off their clothes in front of hidden cameras he planted.

The rabbi admits to secretly videotaping dozens of women. Now, for the first time, two of his students–violated and betrayed by the man they trusted–are telling their stories to WJZ.

Reporter: “Tell us how the rabbi discussed the mikvah with you.”

Victim 1: “How it was presented to me was kind of like a personal baptism where you’re remade new and forgiven of all your sins.”

Victim 2: “He presented it also in that–it doesn’t have to be a religious thing… it’s just a very cleansing, relaxing–it is what you make it sort of thing. He was selling it–he was selling the mikvah.”

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Trial looms for former Rosarian teacher accused of molesting students

FLORIDA
Palm Beach Post

Whether an older, third accuser will testify against former Rosarian Academy teacher Stephen Budd was a topic of discussion this morning at what could be one of the last hearings before his scheduled May 26 trial on child molestation charges.

Budd was arrested in April 2013 on sexual assault, cruelty towards a child and other charges related to claims that he traded candy for sex with two students at the private Catholic school in West Palm Beach.

As part of the investigation, authorities arranged calls between the alleged victims, who told police that during the 2006-07 school year, Budd would give them “Budd bucks,” which she explained was candy in return for sexual acts.

At this morning’s hearing, prosecutor Jessica Kahn filed paperwork asking CIrcuit Judge Karen Miller to allow jurors to hear testimony from another former Budd student who claims Budd behaved inappropriately with her more than a decade ago at a Riviera Beach Catholic school.

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Synod. The German Bishops Are Putting the Cart Before the Horse

ROME
Chiesa

The responses of the episcopal conference to the presynodal questionnaire describe what is already being done in Germany: communion for the divorced and remarried, tolerance for second marriages, approval of homosexual unions

by Sandro Magister

ROME, May 6, 2015 – To judge by the latest product of the German episcopal conference, the synod on the family scheduled for October 4-25 could turn out to be a wasted effort.

Cardinal Reinhard Marx (in the photo), archbishop of Munich and president of the episcopal conference, had made this clear last February 25 with a remark that made its way around the world:

“We are not a subsidiary of Rome. Every episcopal conference is responsible for pastoral care in its own cultural context, and must preach the Gospel in its own original way. We cannot wait for a synod to tell us how we must shape the pastoral care of marriage and the family.”

But now it is Germany’s episcopal conference itself that has set this same concept down in black and white, in its official response – after consulting the “people of God” – to the preparatory questionnaire sent out from Rome in view of the next session of the synod.

When it comes to the question on “how to promote the determination of pastoral guidelines on the level of particular Churches,” the German bishops in fact write:

“Referring to social and cultural differences, some of the responses favour regional agreements on pastoral guidelines at local church level. The basis could also be formed by diocesan discussion processes on the topic of marriage and the family the outcome of which would be discussed with other local churches. This would be conditional on all concerned being willing to engage in a dialogue.”

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God’s New Bankers

VATICAN CITY
Bloomberg Business

by Jeremy Kahn

Pope Francis listens attentively at the front of the packed lecture hall, a one-man island of white amid a sea of cardinals in black cassocks and scarlet zucchettos, or skullcaps. The pope and these “princes” of the Roman Catholic Church have gathered in Vatican City’s Synod Hall, a modern glass and steel building steps from the Renaissance-era St. Peter’s Basilica, to get an update on the financial health of the Holy See.

In any other setting, the scene would have been unremarkable: PowerPoint presentations, charts, graphs. But the Vatican has until recently regarded its finances as so sensitive that its full accounts were known only to the pope and his closest aides. The Feb. 13 briefing, says Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi, was the first time the Consistory of Cardinals had ever received such a detailed look at the books. Equally groundbreaking, the presenters included lay experts, not just clergy. And some of them spoke in English, the language of commerce, not in one of the Vatican’s

As Bloomberg Markets magazine will report in its June issue, the Synod Hall gathering reinforced the notion that Pope Francis is not your father’s Holy Father. From his stand on homosexuality (of gay priests, he once said, “Who am I to judge?”) to helping midwife a rapprochement between the U.S. and Cuba to his social-media savvy (he tweets!), Francis has made headlines and stirred the faithful. He’s reinvigorated a church poisoned by years of sex-abuse scandals and perceived even by many devout Catholics as out of sync with modernity. What’s more, the princely assemblage highlighted a more earthly side of Francis’s church reforms: risking a potentially crippling confrontation with the Roman Curia, the Holy See’s powerful governing bureaucracy, in order to attack waste, mismanagement, and corruption.

The Vatican isn’t a financial powerhouse. Aside from its priceless art collection, it controls less than $7 billion in assets—and that’s being generous in valuing its real estate portfolio. Separately, the Vatican Bank, formally known as the Institute for the Works of Religion, has less than $6.5 billion in assets, most belonging not to the Vatican itself but to Catholic dioceses, orders, and charities. Still, management of the Vatican’s finances matters because it reflects on the moral authority of the church, says Joseph F. X. Zahra, a Maltese businessman and economist who is one of Francis’s closest financial advisers.

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Belgian primate found guilty of misconduct and ordered to pay damages to abuse victim

BELGIUM
The Tablet (UK)

06 May 2015

The Archbishop Brussels, André-Joseph Léonard, has been ordered to pay €10,000 in damages for failing to act on allegations of sexual abuse in the 1990s when he was bishop of Namur. The civil case was brought by a former seminarian who was abused by a priest in the late 1980s,when he was a 14-year-old altar boy.

Joel Devillet, now 42, filed an abuse complaint with a church tribunal, but it advised counselling for him and did not alert the police, said an appeals court in Liege that overturned an earlier judgment exonerating Léonard.

It also said Léonard, who is head of the Belgian bishops’ conference, did not discipline the offending priest, who went on to commit further abuse in another parish. “The way in which Archbishop Léonard treated the case of Joel Devillet constituted misconduct,” the court said.

Archbishop Léonard’s lawyer said his client disagreed with the court judgment but had not yet decided whether he would appeal. “The court lists various things that certain people should have done, but nothing that Archbishop Léonard categorically should have done,” he said. “That nuance is important.”

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St Bride’s parish delight as police say there is no case to answer

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

6 May 2015 By Kenny Smith

Father Morton cleared of wrongdoing after historical sexual abuse allegation

The parish priest of St Bride’s in Cambuslang has been cleared of any wrongdoing after an allegation of historical sexual abuse.

Father Paul Morton was put on administrative leave last September by Catholic Church authorities whilst the claim was investigated, but he always maintained his innocence.

However, on Thursday evening, after an interview lasting less than an hour, he was informed there is no case to answer.

A Police Scotland spokesman said: “We can confirm police have carried out an investigation following an allegation of historical sexual abuse, and no further police action will be taken.”

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May 5, 2015

REMOVAL OF PILSEN PRIEST ‘HEARTBREAKING,’ CUPICH SAYS

ILLINOIS
ABC 7

[with video]

CHICAGO — The archbishop said Father Brendan Curran’s dismissal is particularly tough because of the strong, vibrant Hispanic community he led.

Father Curran was removed from Saint Pius Catholic Church in the Pilsen neighborhood, where he had been since 2001, following an inappropriate relationship with an adult woman.

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Villagers seek action against parish priest

INDIA
The Hindu

A large number of people from various coastal villages across the district thronged Tuticorin Bishop House on Tuesday.

The villagers,led by S. Maharajan, president, Tharuvaikulam panchayat, met Rev. Fr. Yvon Ambroise, Bishop of Tuticorin Roman Catholic Diocese, and sought action against Fr. William Santhanam, parish priest of Punnaikayal, who was placed under suspension. Mr. Maharajan said a memorandum was submitted to the Bishop in this regard.

Fr. Santhanam allegedly assaulted Fr. Vasanthan of Kudankulam Parish in April last year. Earlier, Fr. Santhanam was the parish priest of Shrine Basilica, Our Lady of Snows, and after the incident he was transferred to Punnaikayal even before his tenure at the Basilica was over. It was unjust and unfair that the fellow priest came under attack, the villagers said.

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No bail for priest in child abuse case

INDIA
The Hindu

The Kerala High Court on Tuesday dismissed a bail petition filed by Edwin Figarez, an accused in the case relating to rape of a minor girl at North Paravur.

Justice K. Ramakrishnan while dismissing the petition observed that it was quite unfortunate that sexual abuse of children was on the increase.

The court pointed out that accused in the case was a priest who was supposed to teach morals and prevent the faithful from committing any offence. In his bail petition, the accused, who is a priest with the Lourdes Matha Church, Puthenvelikkara, said that the case had been foisted on him.

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Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church pastor says he’s been reassigned

WISCONSIN
WISN

MILWAUKEE —A bishop is under investigation on allegations he tried to intimidate a pastor at Milwaukee’s Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church.

That pastor said he’s being forced out after exposing embezzlement allegations against a former pastor.

As WISN 12 News previously reported, the Rev. James Dokos is awaiting trial on theft charges.

Now, the priest who exposed the case told WISN 12 News reporter Nick Bohr he is facing retaliation from his superiors.

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Springfield, Ill., diocese removes pastor accused of abuse

ILLINOIS
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. • A Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing a minor the same year he was ordained has been removed as pastor of four central Illinois parishes.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield announced the Rev. Robert “Bud” DeGrand’s immediate removal over the weekend. Bishop Thomas John Paprocki met with parishioners Sunday in Sigel, Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville to explain the decision.

The alleged misconduct occurred in Jacksonville in 1980. DeGrand also has served parishes in Winchester, Bluffs and Granite City.

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Bill would remove pre-2001 CSC statute of limitations

MICHIGAN
WOOD

[with video]

By Tom Hillen
Published: May 5, 2015

LANSING, Mich. (WOOD) — A bill that would retroactively remove the statute of limitations for sex crimes against minors that happened before 2001 went before a Michigan House of Representatives committee on Tuesday.

House Bill 4231 was introduced by state Rep. Holly Hughes, R-Montague, in February after she saw a 24 Hour News 8 story on Randall Doctor.

“When I saw it on television a couple of times, I thought, we can’t just sit around and wait,” Hughes said.

Doctor was a former Cadet leader at Fifth Reformed Church in Muskegon. He has admitted to police that he sexually assaulted between eight and 10 young boys in the 1970s and 1980s.

“I started getting sexually abused when I was 12, and my life changed directions from the first time I met Randy Doctor,” Bryan Derr testified before the House Criminal Justice Committee on Tuesday.

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Man claims Pine Bush priest touched him inappropriately

NEW YORK
News 12

[with video]

PINE BUSH – An Orange County man claims a former Pine Bush priest touched him inappropriately
Michael Kyles says he was 22 years old when he first met Father Kevin Gallagher at the Church of Infant Saviour. He says he began talking with Gallagher to cope with the death of his twin brother Tyler, who was killed in a car crash while in high school.

Kyles said he started using prescription drugs about a year after his brother passed away and eventually became addicted to heroin. He says he turned to Gallagher for money and that the pastor would drive him to get synthetic heroin. As their encounters progressed, Kyles said the pastor would touch him inappropriately.

Michael was not a minor at the time. According to the Orange County District Attorney’s Office, no criminal charges have been filed against Gallagher.

A spokesperson with the Archdiocese of New York has said that Gallagher was removed from his position as pastor following the allegation. It says Gallagher hasn’t been allowed to function as a priest or present himself as a priest since he was removed as pastor from the parish.

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There is Never Enough Blood to Satisfy the Enemies of the Church

KANSAS CITY (MO)
St. Louis Catholic

The group SNAP, which uses the sex abuse scandals in the Church as the cudgel for promoting itself and its own agenda, has moved into the truly Orwellian today. Not content with the sacrifice of Bishop Robert Finn, the Kansas City leader of SNAP is calling for the disciplining of Fr. Gregory Lockwood for the grave crime of defending Bishop Finn in print.

Thoughtcrime. Hate speech.

You see, a faithful bishop cannot even be defended by a faithful Catholic priest or layman publicly, or they’ll go after him, too.

SNAP has decided that Bishop Finn is a bad man. Therefore, anyone who defends him must also be a bad man. We see this line of “reasoning” in other contexts these days by other groups with similar tactics: Bake that cake! Perform that sodomite marriage! Desecrate that Eucharist! Offer up that incense to Moloch!

Or else.

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MO–Victims want KC priest disciplined for defending Finn

KANSAS CITY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, May 4

Statement by David Tate of Kansas City, leader of SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( davidtate27@gmail.com )

In a stunningly callous letter to his parishioners, a Kansas City pastor is misleading Catholics, re-victimizing adults and endangering kids by deceptively defending a convicted bishop and attacking the motives of those who feel betrayed by him.

In a letter to members of Christ the King parish on Wornall Road (written on church letterhead), Fr. Gregory Lockwood claims that Bishop Robert Finn faced a “politically motivated charge” filed by “an ambitious prosecutor with strong ties to the abortion industry.”

The priest also claims that in the Fr. Shawn Ratigan case, church officials “never had any impulse to cover up.”

Fr. Lockwood also claims that many of those who are upset with Finn are “nasty,” say “mean” and “vicious” things about him and part of a “mob scene.”

“The issue was never the Ratigan affair,” Fr. Lockwood writes, but rather some sort of ideological crusade because Finn is conservative. He thus impugns the motives of those who care about kids, about truth and about deterring crimes by holding criminals accountable.

Finally, in a clear deceit, Fr. Lockwood claims that the bishop “pled no contest.” In fact, Finn was found guilty by a judge. (Fr. Lockwood is an educated man. He knows better.)

This is wrong and hurtful on so many levels.

First, it misleads parishioners.

Second, it also re-victimizes adults – both betrayed Catholics and suffering victims – by mischaracterizing and minimizing the crimes by both Finn and Ratigan.

And third, it endangers kids by fostering a hostile climate for victims, witnesses and whistleblowers, making it less likely that child molesters – clergy or otherwise – will be reported, exposed, prosecuted, convicted and kept away from kids.

Somewhere in Christ the King parish there’s a 14 year old girl who is being molested by her uncle. He tells her “If you speak up, no one will believe you.” Then she sees her pastor, Fr. Lockwood, publicly defending a proven enabler. She decides “My uncle is right. Adults side with adults. I won’t be believed. I’ll keep my mouth shut.”

And her abuse continues.

Years later, when she grows out of her uncle’s preferred age range, he goes on to molest her younger sister.

This isn’t rocket science. Adults can either make it harder for kids and adults to report predators. Or adults can make it harder.
Archbishop Joseph Naumann should publicly and harshly discipline Fr. Lockwood to deter this kind of callousness now and in the future.

See Fr. Lockwood letter here.

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Belgian archbishop’s resignation will test Pope’s policy on sex-abuse response

BELGIUM
Catholic Culture

The looming resignation of Belgium’s leading Catholic prelate will bring a new test for Pope Francis’ determination to hold prelates accountable for their handling of sex-abuse cases.

Archbishop André-Joseph Leonard of Brussels will celebrate his 75th birthday on May 6, and in accordance with the Code of Canon Law will be obliged to submit his resignation to Pope Francis. Less than two weeks ago, a Belgian court ordered the archbishop to pay €10,000 in damages to a sex-abuse victim, ruling that the prelate was responsible for a failure to take action on abuse complaints.

While the archbishop’s attorney said that he might appeal the court’s decision, the judgment added to heavy pressure on the Catholic hierarchy in Belgium. Archbishop Leonard’s predecessor in Brussels, Cardinal Godfried Danneels, had been charged with covering up evidence of sexual abuse; and in 2010 police had raided the offices of the bishops’ conference, looking for evidence of criminal negligence.

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Teacher ‘annoyed at being caught’ when sex abuse allegations made, court hears

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

A leading rabbi has told a court that a Jewish teacher was “annoyed at being caught” when confronted with allegations of serious sexual abuse in front of his wife as part of a secret meeting.

Rabbi Shraga Feivel Zimmerman was giving evidence on Tuesday in the trial of 50-year-old Todros Grynhaus, a prominent member of the Charedi community in Salford.

Father-of-ten Mr Grynhaus is charged with five counts of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault against two girls committed when they were aged around 14 and 15.

Rabbi Zimmerman – the Gateshead Rav – and one of the most significant figures in Gateshead’s strictly Orthodox community, was notified of the allegations by Mr Grynhaus’s cousin, Rabbi Gershon Miller, also of Gateshead, in 2010, and it was decided a meeting should be arranged.

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Bishop Robert Finn: the rest of the story

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas P. Doyle | May. 5, 2015 Examining the Crisis

The Vatican’s sterile announcement of Bishop Robert Finn’s resignation was a typical but unsuccessful attempt by the Holy See to sanitize the harsh reality of a failed bishop. It was a removal disguised as a resignation. The absolute need for accountability of bishops would have been far better served had Finn been publicly removed rather than offered the thin camouflage of resignation.

The reason for his resignation in the oblique canonical language of the announcement was his inability to continue to fulfill his office because of “another serious reason” (canon 401.2). Much of the media focus was on Finn’s 2012 conviction of failure to report Shawn Ratigan, a Kansas City priest who had child pornography on his laptop. There’s a lot more to it than that. Whether Finn was an overall effective leader was the main point that Archbishop Terrence Prendergast, the Vatican investigator, looked at. One of his worst failures as a leader was the disastrous way he handled clergy sex abuse cases. This is the other chapter of the story.

Between 2005, the year Finn was appointed, and 2015, there have been at least 94 cases filed against the diocese. Some of these involved allegations of serious sexual abuse that goes back decades — abuse covered up and mishandled by Finn’s predecessors. In many cases, Finn was not part of the cover-up because it was all out in the open by the time he arrived. His failure, the extent of which cannot be understated, was in the way he responded to the victims who resorted to the civil courts. And, as an aside, the main reason most victims have gone to the civil courts is because they have been denied any justice, support or deserved compensation by the church’s administration.

Finn pretty much ignored victims. In his 10 years as bishop, he met with two and possibly a couple more, but not to extend pastoral care. His meetings with victims were all part of legal proceedings. From all sources queried, there is no evidence he ever reached out as a caring shepherd to any of the people whose lives had been ravaged by the Kansas City priests.

He did his dirty work through his lawyers. Although some bishops when asked about the toxic antics of their attorneys try to dodge the issue by claiming it was the lawyers and not them, the cold fact is that the bishop hires the lawyers, sees that they get paid, and approves their strategies. Unlike the victims’ attorneys, who are paid on a contingency basis, the church’s lawyers are paid by the hour whether they win or lose. The lawyers for the Kansas City diocese were paid a lot under Finn’s reign.

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Police Officer and Pastor Reportedly Assaulted Girls in Church, Police HQ

WASHINGTON (DC)
Patch

By DEB BELT (Patch Staff)
May 5, 2015

A Washington, D.C., police officer from Prince George’s County – who is also a pastor — faces charges of sexually assaulting teenage girls at a church and at police headquarters.

Metro Officer Darrell L. Best, 45, of Upper Marlboro, was arrested in March and is being held without bond on four charges, including first-degree sexual abuse while armed and sexual abuse of a minor. Authorities allege he abused two teenage girls who attend his church, God Of A Second Chance Ministry, in Southeast DC.

Since his arrest, a third girl has contacted authorities to report she was also abused by Best, NBC Washington reports.

Best was scheduled to appear in court May 5, but online court records show the conference was rescheduled for June 2. An earlier request that he be released from jail on bond was denied.

Prosecutors say Best reportedly sexually abused a 16-year-old parishioner three times at the church beginning in December.

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D.C. police officer, pastor to face federal child porn charges

WASHINGTON (DC)
WTOP

By Jamie Forzato | @jamieforzato
May 5, 2015

WASHINGTON — A D.C. police officer and pastor accused of sexually abusing two teenagers will face federal child pornography charges.

At D.C. Superior Court on Tuesday, the prosecution announced they found pictures on Darrell Best’s cellphone and intend to file the additional charges in federal court. He already faces several counts of sex abuse of a minor.

Best’s defense attorney, Nikki Lotze says an independent investigation will be conducted.

“They are allegations at this point. We look forward to conducting a thorough, independent investigation,” Lotze says.

Best, a 45-year-old Upper Marlboro resident, was arrested in March after a 16-year-old told investigators he sexually abused her three times at their Southeast D.C. church, God of a Second Chance Ministry Church, in December 2014.

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Eliminating statute of limitations on child molestation could be unconstitutional

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Kyle Feldscher | kylefeldscher@mlive.com
on May 05, 2015

LANSING — A panel of Michigan lawmakers questioned the constitutionality of a bill to allow criminal cases against people accused of molesting children decades ago, despite emotional testimony from alleged victims of a Norton Shores man.

House Bill 4231 would retroactively remove all statute of limitations on first-degree criminal sexual conduct of a minor. In 2001, the Michigan Legislature eliminated the statute of limitations on first-degree criminal sexual conduct, which prior to that was six years.

However, Public Act 6 of 2001 did not remove the statute of limitations for crimes that occurred before May 2001.

That means Randall Doctor, a Norton Shores man currently in prison on drug charges, could not be charged for allegedly molesting between eight and 10 boys — now men —in the late 1970s and 1980s.

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Pope Leans On Grandmother Bishop About Sex Topics As His Climate Letter Nears

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Pope Francis seems to prefer discussing sexual morality secretively with 200 subservient celibate male bishops at “Family Synods” than to discussing this hot topic with a grandmother Lutheran archbishop. This seems to be especially the case when the woman appears to have better theological training and relevant personal experience than the pope and many of his celibate bishops have, especially on matters like sexual morality and the related climate change implications of uncontrolled population growth. The pope recently met (with no pictures or English translation available apparently – why?) with Lady Antje Jackelen, a German by birth who is Archbishop and Primate of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Sweden. The related Evangelical Lutheran Church in Germany is the Catholic Church’s main religious and financial competitor in that lucrative religious market.

The pope noted in their meeting the upcoming 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s revolt. In Italian, the direct pope then, in effect, admonished the woman archbishop that it would be a sin ( “un peccato”) if improving Catholic-Lutheran relations had to be set back by topics like “… the question of the dignity of human life, always to be respected, as well as the issues that are related to the family, marriage and sexuality … ” The pope ominously and almost rudely added then, “It would be a sin (un pecatto”) if these important matters were consolidated into new confessional differences”. Pretty heavy handed, even for an ex-bouncer, no? Does an archbishop really need a pope to tell her what is a sin?

Please see the bishop’s picture here,

[Vatican Insider]

and the pope’s remarks to the woman bishop whom he addressed as “dear sister” (“cara sorella”), here,

[Vatican web site]

Almost 500 years after Luther, the Vatican still seems intent on dictating to Protestants. The woman archbishop will also be meeting with the head of the Anglican church, a married father who sees more matters her way, e.g., on papal authority, sexual morality, women’s equality, et al., than the pope does from most indications.

It appears the pope, who seemingly spends more time meeting with US right wing fundamentalist leaders and international soccer stars than he spent with this informed archbishop and her group, was not in the mood to listen to a woman bishop or be photographed with her. I wonder why? Of course, she must know the pope is in “a box”. He cannot rationally advocate seriously for reducing greenhouse gases at the same time he pushes for more population growth with his irrational ban on contraception.

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.

OK, we will ask: Why isn’t Baltmore Sun nailing local angles in DUI bishop story?

UNITED STATES
GetReligion

Terry Mattingly

The case of the DUI bishop is, in one sense, over – in that Bishop Heather Elizabeth Cook is no longer a leader in the Episcopal Diocese of Maryland. In fact, she is no longer an Episcopal bishop at all, nor is she an Episcopal priest or deacon.

That shoe has dropped and has been covered pretty clearly in the newspaper that lands (for several more weeks) in my front yard near the Baltimore Beltway. But what about the rest of the story?

You see, the timeline that looms behind the story of the rise and tragic fall of Cook – charged with criminal negligent manslaughter, using a texting device while driving, leaving the scene of an accident that resulted in death and three charges of drunken driving – reveals that this is actually two or three stories unfolding at the same time. There is more to this than the dominoes that began falling in her career after her car struck bicyclist Thomas Palermo.

First of all, there is the issue of her election as bishop, including the “what did they know and when did they know it” facts about her documented struggles with addiction to drugs and alcohol. Then there is the impact of this case – financial, legal and professional – on either the leaders of the local diocese, the national church, or both.

However, if you read The Baltimore Sun coverage of Cook’s case, it’s hard to know what is going on at the diocese and national levels. Meanwhile, The Washington Post coverage has included developments at all levels – personal, diocesan and national. Remember this scoop when the Post caught details in a newly released Cook timeline document that were missed by the Sun?

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.

DeGrand removed as pastor at four parishes

ILLINOIS
Journal Courier

By Bre Linstromberg Copper – bcopper@civitasmedia.com

Former Jacksonville priest Robert “Bud” DeGrand has been permanently removed as pastor at four Catholic parishes in the state and is barred from public ministry.

The decision to remove DeGrand was based on the unanimous recommendation of the Diocesan Review Board and Bishop Thomas John Paprocki’s assessment of the information available, according to a news release from the Diocese of Springfield.

The review board had been investigating an accusation against DeGrand involving clerical sexual misconduct with a minor said to have occurred in 1980, while DeGrand was assigned to Our Saviour Parish in Jacksonville.

DeGrand has been on administrative leave from public ministry since the allegation first surfaced in September 2013.

DeGrand’s removal is not directly related to the allegation but to his refusal to comply with Paprocki’s order that DeGrand move to a private home in Springfield while on administrative leave.

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.

IL–Ex-Granite City priest ousted for abuse accusations

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Ex-Granite City priest ousted for abuse accusations
His flock buys him a house & his bishop pays for his lawyer
SNAP blasts “unprecedented golden parachute” for predator
Group urges Catholic officials to “educate & reign in church-goers”

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will denounce the fact that

–a group of Catholic parishioners are buying a house for a predator priest, and
–a Catholic bishop is paying for the priest’s lawyer.

They will also urge Springfield’s Catholic officials to

–stop or at least denounce both moves, and
–aggressively seek out others who were hurt by the priest so that he might be prosecuted.

WHEN
TODAY, Tuesday, May 5 at 2 p.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside St. Elizabeth Catholic Church, 2300 Pontoon Rd, Granite City, IL (618-877-3300)

WHO
Two-three clergy sex abuse victims who belong to SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, including the organization’s long time executive director

WHY
In what SNAP says is a “first” anywhere in the US, parishioners in a small Illinois town are buying a house for a suspended predator priest while the local bishop is using church funds to pay the accused priest’s legal fees.

[Effingham Daily News]

On Sunday, Springfield Bishop Thomas Paprocki told church-goers that Fr. Robert “Bud” DeGrand – who worked in Granite City – won’t ever work in a parish again. But SNAP is appalled that Paprocki is paying for Fr. DeGrand’s lawyer and saying little or nothing while members of Fr. DeGrand’s parish are buying him a home.

These moves “rubs salt into the wounds of suffering victims and betrayed Catholics” SNAP believes, and “discourages other abuse victims from reporting crimes, exposing predators and protecting kids.”

It’s common, SNAP says, for church-goers to rally around a credibly accused child molesting cleric. It happens largely for two reasons: because most child predators are shrewd, personable and charming and because virtually no church official teaches his flock about how harmful such actions are and about how rare false allegations against clergy are.

SNAP is urging Paprocki to

–stop using parishioner donations to pay Fr. DeGrand’s lawyer
–publicly beg parishioners to stop “enabling” Fr. DeGrand by financially backing him
–educate his flock about how to act responsibly when priests are accused of abuse
–put notices about the credible accusations against Fr. DeGrand on the diocesan website
–do the same with parish bulletins and websites across the diocese
–beg, in each notice, all victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call police
–visit each church where Fr. DeGrand has worked, making the same plea in person, and
–give his personnel file to law enforcement agencies in every county where he worked

Taking “these simple, inexpensive and proven prevention steps will boost the chances that Fr. DeGrand could be prosecuted, convicted and kept away from kids,” SNAP maintains.

When the case first surfaced in late 2013, Paprocki kept the accusation against Fr. DeGrand secret for weeks. That’s one of several ways, SNAP says, that Paprocki mishandled this case.

He also let Fr. DeGrand resign from his posts at Catholic parishes in Sigel, Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville (all near Effingham). SNAP said Paprocki should have suspended him instead.

SNAP urges anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes by Fr. DeGrand or cover ups by Paprocki – especially current and former Springfield area Catholic employees – to “call police, expose wrongdoers, deter wrongdoing and start healing.”

According to the Official Catholic Directory, Fr. DeGrand was pastor of St. Elizabeth’s in Granite City in from 1991-1996. He is not indexed in the 1997 Directory. In the 1998 Directory, he is indexed and listed as on leave. Fr. DeGrand was ordained to the priesthood in 1980.

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

Father DeGrand Permanently Removed as Pastor of Four Parishes

ILLINOIS
XFM

Written by Greg Sapp

Bishop Thomas John Paprocki has permanently removed Father Robert “Bud” DeGrand as pastor of the parishes of St. Michael and Archangel in Sigel, St. Mary of the Assumption in Neoga, St. Mary Help of Christians in Green Creek, and Sacred Heart in Lillyville, effective immediately.

The Bishop sent a letter to parishioners that said his action was taken “In light of Father DeGrand’s refusal to cooperate with the process to determine his suitability to return to ministry.”

Father Sunder Ery will continue as Parochial Administrator of the parishes.

Father DeGrand was removed from active ministry when the Diocesan Review Board unanimously found that an allegation of clerical sexual misconduct with a minor was credible. The finding came in December of 2013 but involved an alleged incident that was to have occurred decades before when he was serving in another parish in Illinois.

Bishop Paprocki met with parishioners in Sigel last September 20 and reported that Father DeGrand’s case was pending at the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The Bishop’s letter, dated May 2, said, “What I did not know at the time when I met with you was that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith had sent me a letter dated September 10, 2014, referring the case back to me. I did not receive that letter until the week after my meeting with parishioners due to the time it takes for mail to be sent from the Vatican by diplomatic channels through the Vatican Embassy in Washington, DC.”

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Adass Israel School principal’s exit arranged by school council member, court told

AUSTRALIA
The Age

May 5, 2015

Patrick Hatch
Reporter for The Age

A member of a Melbourne school council arranged plane tickets to whisk its principal, wanted on child sex abuse charges, out of the country, a court has heard.

The Supreme Court heard on Tuesday that Mair Ernst arranged tickets for Malka Leifer to fly out of the country in March 2008, just days after she was sacked from Adass Israel Girls’ School, in Elsternwick, over allegations of inappropriate behaviour.

A former student, who is one of Mrs Leifer’s alleged victims, is suing the school for negligence.

Mrs Leifer was arrested in West Bank settlement town of Emanuel in August last year and is facing extradition to Victoria to face child sex abuse charges.

Mrs Leifer – an Israeli citizen who was hand-picked to move to Australia to head the school – is now uder house-arrest in Jerusalem.

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Abuso sexual: “asumir una actitud de tolerancia cero es una opción evangélica”

ARGENTINA
La Gaceta

[An attitude of zero tolerance of sexual abuse is an evangelical option, according to priest Marcelo Gidi who said the Catholic church must care for and protect the victims.]

Desde el 2000 la Iglesia se ha visto en una tormenta, en un tsunami, de denuncias contra cleros por abusos sexuales, según el sacerdote Marcelo Gidi, quien se encuentra en Salta invitado por el colegio Belgrano. Ante esta situación dijo que el Papa y muchas conferencias episcopales van asumiendo “una actitud de tolerancia cero, que es una opción evangélica”.

“Este es un gran drama que estamos viviendo, pero que como Iglesia podemos salir purificados”, agregó.

A cerca de su llegada a esta institución educativa, Gidi consideró una iniciativa favorable para la formación integral de los alumnos. El abuso sexual “es un tema que hemos estado sufriendo en estos últimos años y debemos generar mejores vínculos relacionales entre los padres y sus hijos. En ese aspecto el colegio, haciéndose cargo de esta situación, quiere formar a los papás en prevención”, detalló el sacerdote, refiriendo al caso del profesor acusado de cometer presuntamente este delito contra estudiantes del Belgrano.

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An Invitation from Archbishop Nienstedt, but what of the CSA?

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

05/04/2015

Priests of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis (which I like to refer to as the Worst Diocese on Earth) recently received several notices from the Chancery that might be of interest to the lay faithful as well.

The first was to indicate that follow up solicitation letters would be sent out this week to those who have not yet donated to the 2015 Catholic Services Appeal. Curious, I attempted to determine where the CSA stands this year, both in terms of dollars received and pledged. Historically, the April editions of The Catholic Spirit have provided those numbers, along with a list of the parishes that have met or exceeded their goal. As far as I can tell, however, the current digital edition (April 23, 2015), does not contain any CSA information. Granted, the entire first page was dedicated to an announcement of the bar date set for victims of sexual abuse, so they were probably short of space. Still, the CSA, which has also pledged itself to transparency towards its donors, doesn’t seem to be very transparent about its collections.

But, they have done a good job of notifying people of their move. Pastors and others were notified that, as of April 27, 2015, the Catholic Services Appeal Foundation had moved out of the Chancery complex and into a suite in Plymouth. It is unclear if this move was undertaken to attempt to demonstrate a separation between the Foundation and the Archdiocese, or merely in anticipation of the eventual sale of the Chancery buildings as part of the reorganization.

The third and final communication was my favorite, as this came with the signature of the Archbishop himself. I will forego comment, and simply post the letter here for your edification and amusement.

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Brooks youth pastor sentenced to 33 years in rape of girl

OREGON
Statesman Journal

Alisha Roemeling, Statesman Journal

A former Brooks youth pastor, Peter James Bass, 36, was sentenced Monday to 33 years and four months in prison after he repeatedly raped a girl under the age of 16.

Bass appeared before Marion County Circuit Judge Tracy Prall, where he pleaded guilty to five counts of first-degree rape and waived his right to a jury trial. Following the plea, Deputy District Attorney Tiffany Underwood asked that Prall sentence Bass to a total of 35 years and 10 months in prison.

Bass’s attorney, Robert Botta argued that Bass receive less time in prison, 16 years and 8 months, because he opted not to have a trial, saving the victim from additional pain.

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Twitter abuse shocked Vatican

VATICAN CITY
9 News

OMG! The Vatican almost closed the Pope’s Twitter account shortly after it opened because it was bombarded with abuse.

The first pontiff to tweet was Pope Benedict on December 12, 2012 and he had to be shown which key to press.

The man who showed him was Archbishop Claudio Celli, the president of the Pontifical Council for Social Communications.

Archbishop Celli is in Sydney for a communications congress and he confessed to AAP that the first tweet sent by Benedict XVI was the only time a Pope actually hit send.

Now it is a technician who transmits Pope Francis’ tweets after the man himself has approved them.

Engagement with social media was a hard sell in the Vatican especially during Pope Benedict’s time.

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Sex offender registers don’t mean we can assume children are safe

AUSTRALIA
The Conversation

Caroline Taylor
Adjunct professor at Edith Cowan University

Eyal Gringart
Senior Lecturer and Discipline Leader, Psychology within the School of Psychology and Social Science at Edith Cowan University

The sexual abuse of children remains one of the most urgent and unremitting issues across the globe. The royal commission into sexual abuse of children in institutions has given currency to an entrenched and critical social problem. However, our newly published research into Australia’s first publicly accessible register of sex offenders highlights the dangers of public misunderstanding of how it works and, indeed, of where the risks for children are greatest.

While many see the royal commission as an unprecedented examination of child sexual abuse in Australia, the reality is that it avoids any focus or recognition of where most of this abuse occurs, which is within a family setting. This is extremely important: it means that a child is most vulnerable in the context where the utmost safety is expected as well as assumed.

Notwithstanding this concern, the royal commission and recently completed state inquiries into abuse in institutional settings mean sex offenders outside of the family institution – their crimes, modus operandi and propensity to repeat offend without detection – are very much to the fore in public and political discourse.

Alongside these debates sits the issue of managing convicted sex offenders. Countries have established “sex offender registries” whereby certain types of offenders are listed and required to inform police of their residence, work status and other movements.

In the US, California first implemented a sex offender registry in the 1940s. The model is now established across every US state. It was not until the mid-1990s and into the first decade of the new century that countries like the UK, Canada and Australia implemented such registries.

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Sexual Abuse By Nuns: Why Are There So Few Lawsuits? [Part 2 of 3]

UNITED STATES
Patrick Noaker

By Attorney Patrick Noaker

As is discussed in part 1 of this series, Nun sexual abuse is more prevalent than most originally thought. If that is the case, then why have there not been as many lawsuits for sexual abuse involving nuns? This article discusses some of the unique aspects of bringing civil claims relating to sexual abuse by nuns.

There is no question that civil lawsuits have played a major role in exposing and understanding clergy sexual abuse. In fact, Fr. Thomas Doyle, one of the heroes of the child protection movement in the Catholic church stated “The twists and turns of the civil discovery process have been the most important factors in exposing the extent and nature of clergy sexual abuse.” [1]

So, why have there been so few civil lawsuits involving nun abuse been filed? There have been a brave few who have brought sexual abuse lawsuits involving nuns; however, those lawsuits have been somewhat sporadic. Why?

Disclosure is difficult

Initially, it must be noted that disclosure of any kind of sexual abuse as a child is extremely difficult. Sexual abuse causes trauma and survivors are often fearful of coming forward. In addition, sexual abuse may cause a wide variety of psychological problems that can cause survivors to experience shame, fear and grief as a result of the abuse. Disclosure is sexual abuse is extremely difficult and those who are able to report the abuse, normally do so only after years struggling with where, when and how to report.

So, why do fewer nun sexual abuse victims disclose the sexual abuse by filing a lawsuit than those sexually abused by priests? An article by Myriam S. Denov, Ph.D from the University of Ottawa titled “The Long-Term Effects of Child Sexual Abuse by Female Perpetrators” may be instructive on this issue.[2] According to Dr. Denov, the general public and even child welfare police and social workers have historically perceived sexual abuse of children by women to be less harmful to victims than sexual abuse by men, often leaving victims of female perpetrators feeling trivialized. When those same victims were evaluated, those who had sexually abused by both men and women reported that the sexual abuse by the female perpetrator was more harmful.

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Pastor Accused of Sexually Assaulting Boys in Stockton

CALIFORNIA
Fox 40

MAY 4, 2015, BY KAY RECEDE

STOCKTON-

A Bay Area pastor is accused of sexually abusing three boys in Stockton in the 1990s, and it may have happened while he was working for San Joaquin County.

Pastor Jerry Allums is seen singing in a Facebook video in what he calls his testimony.

The video was posted just a month before he was arrested by the Stockton Police Department for alleged sexual abuse of three boys.

“Crimes happened in Stockton but they happened in the 1990s,” Elton Grau, the deputy district attorney in the San Joaquin County’s Child Abuse Sexual Assault Unit said Monday.

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Friar stationed at The Grotto molested 3 California boys, new records reveal

OREGON
Oregonian

By Bryan Denson | The Oregonian/OregonLive
on May 04, 2015

For many decades, a Servite friar who served at a Catholic shrine in Portland kept his sexual molestation of three boys a secret.

But the nature of Brother Gregory Atherton’s shame went public this month, when lawyers for 508 people who won a $660 million judgment against the Archdiocese of Los Angeles for clergy abuse released a massive trove of personnel files.

Atherton, who is 89 years old and living in an undisclosed location, fully acknowledged his wrongdoing and apologized to his Servite brothers, said the Rev. John Fontana, the provincial of the order’s roughly 55 friars in the U.S.

Once the allegations were substantiated, Atherton was immediately removed from public ministry, placed out of contact with children and placed under a “safety plan,” Fontana said. But Servites don’t turn their back on their own, he said, and they found work for him out of the public midst.

“One victim, in his adult life, decided he needed to talk to Brother Greg,” said Fontana, who witnessed what he described as a touching meeting between Atherton and the man. He recalled the words spoken by Atherton’s victim: “If I’m going to follow the gospel, I forgive you.”

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Settlement may shed new light on alleged sexual abuse at St. John’s Abbey

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

JULIE NELSON, ANCHOR AND STEVE ECKERT, INVESTIGATIVE PRODUCER

One former Benedictine monk claims during his time there, officials at St. John’s Abbey turned a blind eye to sexual abuse and were part of a “pattern” of covering up for abusive monks.

“I contend that St. John’s produces, protects, fosters this kind of behavior,” says Richard Sipe.

Sipe, who attended St. John’s and once served as a consultant on a task force on sexual abuse at St. John’s Abbey, claims sexual misconduct was a systemic problem.

His allegations come on the heels of a settlement last week in the case of Troy Bramlage, who sued St. John’s Abbey for failing to protect him from sexual abuse by Father Allen Tarlton, back in the 1970s.

“Take your life back,” said Bramlage at a news conference about the settlement. “Don’t stay in the dark. The way we win is to bring this to light.”

Bramlage alleged he was molested when he was just 14, by his English teacher at St. John’s Preparatory School.

The settlement, according to Bramlage’s attorney Jeff Anderson, also requires St. John’s Abbey to release the files of 18 other monks accused of sexually abusing children.

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May 4, 2015

Royal Commission to hold public hearing into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

5 May, 2015
The Royal Commission will hold public hearings in Ballarat. The first public hearing commences on Tuesday 19 May 2015 and the second will commence on a date to be announced.

The scope and purpose of the first public hearing is to hear:

1. From residents, students and others of their experiences of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy and religious associated with the following institutions run by Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat:

a. St Joseph’s Home, Ballarat
b. St Alipius Primary School, Ballarat East
c. St Alipius Parish, Ballarat East
d. St Patrick’s College, Ballarat
e. St Patrick’s Christian Brothers Boys Primary School, Ballarat.

2. From residents, students and others about the impact of their experiences of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy and religious associated with institutions run by Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat.

3. From members of the community of Ballarat about the impact of child sexual abuse on the community of Ballarat.

4. The response of relevant Catholic Church authorities to:

a. the impact of child sexual abuse on survivors of child sexual abuse, their families and the community of Ballarat; and
b. survivors of child sexual abuse, their families and the community of Ballarat following the conviction
of Catholic clergy and religious for acts of child sexual abuse committed at institutions associated with Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat.

5. From Catholic clergy who have been convicted of child sexual offences which took place within the geographical bounds of the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat.

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Missoula attorneys: Helena Diocese shows willingness to reform in sex abuse settlement

MONTANA
Missoulian

DAVID ERICKSON david.erickson@missoulian.com

[Non-monetary commitments]

Although hundreds of sexual abuse victims who sued the Roman Catholic Diocese of Helena stand to share a $20 million settlement, a pair of Missoula attorneys who represented the survivors say the non-monetary portion of the settlement – including a requirement that churches establish a “whistleblower” policy – is equally important.

Milt Datsopoulos and Molly Howard of the Missoula law firm Datsopoulos, MacDonald and Lind represented many of the plaintiffs in the case, which began in 2011 when more than 360 abuse victims filed suit against the clergy, alleging that more than 80 ordained priests, Ursuline Sisters and other church employees committed everything from rape to fondling to illegal photography of children.

The alleged abuse occurred from the 1940s to the 1970s at various parishes all over the Northwest, but a majority happened at the St. Ignatius Mission and the Ursuline Academy in St. Ignatius.

None of the alleged perpetrators were ever charged with a crime because of the statute of limitations.

In March, a U.S. bankruptcy judge approved a $20 million payment plan to settle the case, which was sealed to protect the identity of the victims. The settlement also included many non-financial stipulations, including:

• A requirement that the church post on its website the names of all known past and present alleged perpetrators of the diocese who are identified in the complaints.

• The diocese will never seek to direct, pay or hire any agent, employee or third party to retract, oppose or challenge the constitutionality or legitimacy of any reform of a civil or criminal statute of limitations, or to eliminate the existing mandatory child abuse reporting statutory requirements or other laws which serve to shield child sexual abusers from investigation, apprehension, prosecution and conviction in Montana or similar legislation or law in any other state or jurisdiction.

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Advocate criticizes handling of priest’s removal

ILLINOIS
Effingham Daily News

Monday, May 4, 2015

Bill Grimes Daily News

A nationally known advocate for victims of clerical sex abuse said it’s not surprising that Catholics in parishes served by the Rev. Robert “Bud” DeGrand have offered almost universal support to the embattled priest, who was permanently removed from his pastoral duties over the weekend.

“They almost always are beloved by their congregations,” said David Clohessy, national director for the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, based in St. Louis.

DeGrand served as the pastor of parishes in Sigel, Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville since 1999. He had been on administrative leave while church leaders reviewed allegations of sexual abuse from the early 1980s, while DeGrand was serving a parish in Jacksonville.

DeGrand has never been charged with a crime. Messages seeking comment, conveyed to DeGrand through a former church trustee in Sigel, were not returned.

Clohessy said Bishop Thomas John Paprocki of the Springfield Diocese did not go far enough by just removing DeGrand from public ministry on Saturday.

“They do the absolute minimum and don’t do it well,” Clohessy said.

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Rev. Curran may face long road back to pulpit after breaking chastity vow

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

By Manya Brachear Pashman
Chicago Tribune

When parishioners of St. Pius V Roman Catholic Church learned Sunday that their longtime pastor, the Rev. Brendan Curran, had broken his vows of chastity, prompting him to be removed from ministry, some priests in his religious order asked themselves if they had failed their brother.

After all, Dominican Friars are encouraged to confide in their best friends — their brothers, in a sense — and lean on the community in which they live.

“How did we let him down? Where were we when this was going on?” said the Rev. Andy McAlpin, vocation director for the Dominicans’ local province. “That’s the question we ask ourselves. Did I see something in the moment that I didn’t call to question?”

Experts say it’s a rare occurrence for a priest to break his vow of celibacy. There are often measures in place to help keep them faithful, starting with preparation in seminary and systems of support that endure long after their ordination. When a priest does go astray, it can be a slow and arduous climb back to ministry. First there must be penance and careful self-examination to make sure returning to ministry is the right path.

“The bar is being raised with priests today,” said Monsignor Stephen Rossetti, president emeritus of St. Luke Institute, a nationally renowned psychological treatment facility for priests. “We’re expected to live our lives with integrity. When we don’t, it’s possible we can lose the privilege of being in a ministry. Ministry is a privilege, not a right.”

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Priest in the clear….

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Priest in the clear over historic sex abuse allegations

Tuesday 5 May 2015

A PRIEST has been told he will not be pursued over historic sex abuse allegations after he was asked to attend a police station.

Father Paul Morton, of St Bride’s RC church in Cambuslang, South Lanarkshire, was interviewed by officers last Thursday before being told they are no longer investigating him over the claims.

The 55-year-old has been suspended since October, when an allegation dating back many years was made to police.

He was also asked to vacate the parish house attached to the church.

The Bishop of Motherwell, Joseph Toal, in whose diocese the church is based, would not comment on the priest’s future following the decision.

He had sent a letter to parishoners, read out during Mass on Sunday, saying that he still had to decide if the priest would return to St Bride’s. It is not known if Fr Morton’s suspension has been lifted.

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Abuse opinions sought

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

CHILD abuse survivors who reported the crime are being asked to tell how they were treated by police and the courts.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has flagged that fundamental changes may need to be made to the criminal justice system when it comes to dealing with victims of child sexual abuse.

As part of its research the commission wants people who experienced the system, either as a complainant, a lawyer or a victims’ support professional, to share their observations.

Across 26 public hearings since 2013, evidence has been given of police in Queensland, NSW Western Australia and Victoria returning children to state and church-run homes even though they reported being sexually and physically abused at the institutions.

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Royal Commission into child abuse turns its eye to Police

AUSTRALIA
Sunshine Coast Daily

Chris Calcino | 5th May 2015

SURVIVORS who reported child sexual abuse in an institution to police have been asked to tell their stories about interactions with officers and the courts.

The Royal Commission uncovering a history of sexual predation in some of Australia’s largest institutions is now turning its attention to police and the prosecutorial process.

The new inquiry follows testimonies given over 26 inquiries since 2013 about children being returned to church-run institutions after complaining about abuse to police, only for the mistreatment to continue.

Royal Commission CEO Philip Reed said victims, family members, witnesses, support workers and the institutions involved would all be invited to give evidence.

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Responding appropriately to inappropriate behavior

ILLINOIS
The Dominican Province of St. Albert the Great

The Archdiocese of Chicago recently received an allegation of an inappropriate relationship involving Fr. Brendan Curran, O.P. from an adult single woman. Though the incident occurred a number of years ago and ended, Fr. Brendan acknowledged his actions were inappropriate. Fr. Brendan affirms that this was an isolated instance, and he understands the consequences.

Father Brendan made a poor choice. Everyone does, to varying degrees. But he and his choices are held against a higher standard because he professed religious vows as a friar in the Dominican Order, Province of St. Albert the Great (Central Province, USA). His poor judgment in this instance casts a shadow on his enlightened and courageous ministry to Latino immigrants and the poor at St. Pius V parish and Chicago’s southwest side.

“I deeply regret not self-identifying sooner about my immoral behavior: that was a mistake,” Fr. Brendan said. “I failed to remember my ministry and my commitment as a priest, and for that I cannot apologize enough. I am heartbroken to know that my actions have caused pain to so many people. From the bottom of my heart, I apologize and ask for forgiveness. I plan on trying to make amends by seeking spiritual healing and rededicating myself to God’s service.”

To be clear, there is no indication or allegation of any action reflecting sexual misconduct with minors.

“The woman in this case came forward privately to the Archdiocese, and then to the Dominicans,” Fr. Charles Bouchard, O.P., Prior Provincial said. “She deserves a sincere apology and we also have a responsibility to respect her anonymity and her privacy. We admire her courage and we’re keeping her in our prayers.”

If Fr. Brendan were the CEO of a corporation and she were an employee, a colleague, or a customer, there would be no press release, no media story, and perhaps no apology. But, the Catholic Church is not a corporation, and its leaders inherently carry a larger responsibility to its patrons—a bond of trust, based on a moral code and a unique easement between God and His people.

In line with official protocol, Fr. Brendan’s faculties were revoked on April 30th, which means he can no longer celebrate Mass or the sacraments. He left his position as Pastor at St. Pius V and left the Chicago area shortly thereafter.

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Pilsen Priest Removed Over Relationship With Woman Five Years Ago

ILLINOIS
Chicagoist

[statement from the Dominican order.]

A local Catholic priest has been removed from his ministry over accusations that he broke his celibacy vows.

The Catholic church requires its priests to be celibate, meaning no sexual relationships and no marriage. The Rev. Brendan Curran, a prominent priest from Pilsen, allegedly had an “inappropriate relationship” with an unmarried adult woman five years ago, the Archdiocese of Chicago recently learned, and now is no longer allowed to perform certain religious duties.

Curran, who served as pastor of St. Pius V in Pilsen, has not been accused of a crime, according to church representatives. His ability to say mass and give sacrament to married people, among other faculties that priests perform, have been revoked because of the relationship he had with another adult over a period of several months in 2010.

Curran might be able to return to the ministry in the future, according to Bill Skowronski, a spokesman for the Dominican Friars, after undergoing a “spiritual healing” program under the Dominican order, the specific Roman Catholic order he belongs to.

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Priest removed as pastor of east-central Illinois parishes

ILLINOIS
State Journal-Register

By Staff report

Posted May. 4, 2015 at 3:52 PM

The Rev. Robert “Bud” DeGrand, a Roman Catholic priest who was alleged to have sexually abused a youth while he was serving in Jacksonville more than 30 years ago, has been permanently removed as pastor of the east-central Illinois parishes has was currently leading.

Springfield Bishop Thomas John Paprocki met Sunday with parishioners of St. Michael the Archangel in Sigel, St. Mary of the Assumption in Neoga, St. Mary Help of Christians in Green Creek and Sacred Heart in Lillyville to deliver the news. The move is effective immediately.

In January 2014, the Diocesan Review Board unanimously found that the allegation against DeGrand, 62, of clerical sexual misconduct with a minor was credible. On Sept. 20, Paprocki met with parishioners and reported that DeGrand’s case was pending at the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. One week later, Paprocki received a letter referring the case back to him.

According to the diocese, DeGrand refused to cooperate in the investigation and rejected Paprocki’s order that he move to a private residence in Springfield while on administrative leave. As a result, Paprocki removed DeGrand from public minstry.

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A crisis in the German church? Synod questionnaire would suggest so

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

By Carl Bunderson

Vatican City, May 2, 2015 / 05:44 pm (CNA).- The Synod of Bishops began receiving in April responses to a questionnaire that had been sent to dioceses the world over in preparation for October’s Synod on the Family. The results from Germany indicate that most Catholics there hope for an openness to divorce and remarriage, as well as homosexual acts.

The synthesis of responses from Catholics in Germany was released by the nation’s bishops conference on April 16. The 17-page document, provided in an English translation, summarizes the responses, which filled some 1,000 pages.

According to the German bishops conference, the largest part of comments dealt with the issues of the divorced and civilly remarried, cohabiting couples, and same-sex unions.

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UPDATE: Bishop permanently removes area priest as pastor

ILLINOIS
Effingham Daily News

Bill Grimes Daily News

SIGEL — A former trustee at St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church in Sigel said Saturday’s permanent removal of the Rev. Robert “Bud” DeGrand from his pastoral duties was “wrong.”

In fact, George Nuxoll said, some of DeGrand’s Sigel parishioners thought so much of their longtime priest that they bought him a home, even furnishing it for him, despite an order from Bishop Thomas John Paprocki that he leave the parish and move to a home in Springfield.

“We respect him (DeGrand),” Nuxoll said. “We want him here.”

The Springfield Diocese said in a news release Saturday that Paprocki “concluded that he has no choice” but to permanently remove DeGrand from his pastoral duties. DeGrand had been on leave as the pastor, not only in Sigel, but of parishes in Neoga, Green Creek and Lillyville after a diocesan review board found that allegations of sexual misconduct against DeGrand were “credible.” Those allegations stemmed from an alleged incident in 1980 while DeGrand was serving a parish in Jacksonville.

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Pontiff defends 18th-century Spanish priest accused of brutality amidst canonization

ROME
Pulse (Nigeria)

Pope Francis has defended an 18th-century Spanish Catholic priest on Saturday from accusations that he brutalized Native Americans in missionary work that helped lay the foundations for the Catholic Church in the United States.

The pontiff intends to make a saint, Father Junipero Serra at a Mass celebrated at the National Shrine in Washington on Sept 23 during his US visit.

The Franciscan missionary built a series of missions along the Pacific coast in the latter 18th century, in what is now California, to spread the faith among Native Americans there.

Tribal leaders in California say Serra beat and imprisoned local peoples, suppressed their cultures and facilitated the spread of diseases that decimated the population, Christian Post reports

Without addressing specific accusations, Francis praised Serra’s missionary zeal and said the priest “defended the indigenous peoples against abuses by the colonizers”.

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Pedophile priests to take the stand for first time at hearings

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MAY 05, 2015

Dan Box
Crime Reporter
Sydney

Catholic clergy who have been found guilty of sexually abusing children will give evidence in ­Ballarat this month at a royal commission hearing into the church’s actions.

It is the first time convicted Catholic abusers will be called as witnesses before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which will also investigate the ­impact of these crimes on the community of Ballarat.

This month’s hearing will be the first of two held by the royal commission in the city, northeast of Melbourne, which is thought to have suffered some of the worst and most widespread church-­related child abuse in Australia’s recent history.

Several former priests and teachers in Catholic schools from Ballarat have been jailed for child abuse committed over several decades. Many of their victims are expected to give evidence before the commission, including those from St Alipius Parish and St Alipius Primary School, where one of the city’s most notorious Catholic abusers, Gerald Ridsdale, worked for several years.

Ridsdale was ultimately jailed for abusing more than 50 children between the 1960s and 80s, some of his victims being as young as four years old.

On the day of his first conviction, in 1993, television cameras recorded Ridsdale being accompanied to court by George Pell, who used to live with him in the presbytery at St Alipius, and was by then auxiliary bishop for Melbourne. Cardinal Pell went on to become Melbourne’s archbishop, then the archbishop of Sydney and is currently one of the most senior officials within the Vatican, with responsibility for the papal treasury.

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IL–Spgfld bishop pays predator priest’s lawyer

ILLINOIS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, May 4

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

Spriingfield’s Catholic bishop is using church funds to pay the legal fees for a credibly accused and permanently removed predator priest.

[Effingham Daily News]

We’re glad that, if Bishop Thomas Paprocki keeps his promise, Fr. Robert “Bud” DeGrand won’t ever work in a parish again. But Paprocki has handled this case irresponsibly from the beginning and he continues to do so now.

[SNAP]

We urge Paprocki to

–stop using parishioner donations to buy a lawyer for an ousted pedophile priest
–put notices about Fr. DeGrand and the credible accusations against him on the diocesan website
–do the same with parish bulletins and websites across the diocese
–beg, in each notice, all victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call police
–visit each church where Fr. DeGrand has worked, making the same plea in person, and
–turn over, to law enforcement agencies in every county where he worked, his personnel file.

Taking these simple, inexpensive and proven prevention steps will boost the chances that Fr. DeGrand could be prosecuted, convicted and kept away from kids.

Taking these steps will also be a way to mitigate the damage caused by Paprocki’s reckless and callous secrecy in this case. He kept the allegations hidden for weeks, giving Fr. DeGrand plenty of time to destroy evidence, intimidate victims, threaten witnesses, discredit whistleblowers, fabricate alibis and even potentially flee the country.

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Ballarat abuse victims get their say

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

The Catholic Church’s failures in dealing with some of Australia’s worst pedophiles will be laid out before the abuse royal commission when it sits in the Victorian town of Ballarat this month.

Church representatives and even clergy who have been convicted of child sex abuse will be called before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Victims still scarred by the abuse will have the chance to tell their stories while residents are expected to give evidence about the impact of child sexual abuse on the Ballarat community.

The royal commission public hearing, beginning on May 19, will also hear about the response of church authorities to the sexual abuse and its impact on victims, and to the conviction of clergy members for child sex abuse.

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