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 19, 2015

They’ve been told to ‘get over it’ for 700 Sundays. They come anyway.

BOSTON (MA)
Boston.com

[with video]

By Allison Pohle @AllisonPohle Video by Guru Amar Khalsa @GuruAmarK
Boston.com Staff | 05.18.15

The Cathedral of the Holy Cross cast a shadow over his face, but Richard Orareo stood tall, with one hand holding his cane and the other holding a poster of a girl who was raped by a priest from kindergarten through the seventh grade.

The church bells began ringing just as Orareo began to speak to a crowd of 20 other survivors gathered in front of the church.

“It’s my competition,” Orareo said of the bells.

“But you can stand up to it,” said Paul Kellen.

Orareo has stood up to the bells, and up to the Catholic Church, for more than 13 years.

After The Boston Globe released its investigation into sexual abuse by clergy members, he became one of the first survivors to take his place as a self-proclaimed sidewalk protester in front of the Cathedral of the Holy Cross.

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.

Ballarat’s toxic legacy of sexual abuse by clergy

AUSTRALIA
ABC – Lateline

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 18/05/2015
Reporter: Hamish Fitzsimmons

Both victims and abusers will give evidence, when the Royal Commission into Child Sexual Abuse holds public hearings in the Victorian city of Ballarat. Lateline’s Hamish Fitzsimmons was given exclusive access to a support group for survivors

Transcript

EMMA ALBERICI, PRESENTER: Both victims and abusers will give evidence tomorrow when the Royal commission into child sexual abuse holds public hearings in the Victorian city of Ballarat.

It was one of the worst places for abuse by Catholic clergy and the damage they caused continues to ruin lives.

One survivor has told Lateline the death rate from suicide is now higher than the road toll in Ballarat.

It’s been revealed that at one stage in 1971, the entire male staff of the St Alipius primary school was molesting children.

One of the most notorious abusers in Ballarat was Father Gerald Ridsdale. He’ll be giving evidence to the commission this week via video link from prison.

While the Federal Government opposes a national redress scheme for victims, support is available. It’s often provided through the Catholic Church, but there are others, like the Centre Against Sexual Assault in Ballarat.

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.

Ballarat priests involved in child sex abuse sent on ‘treatment’ trips, inquiry told

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Catholic priests involved in the sexual abuse of young children were repeatedly moved to different parishes in Victoria and sent on “treatment” trips to the US and Italy before eventually being convicted of their crimes, the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse has heard.

The opening day of hearings in the Victorian town of Ballarat featured the start of evidence from 17 men who said they were abused at five Catholic institutions in the area.

The widespread abuse, over the course of three decades from the 1960s onwards, has been linked to at least a dozen suicides in the Ballarat area due to the trauma endured by abuse victims.

The prolific offending of Gerald Ridsdale, who has been found guilty on four occasions of more than 100
Gail Furness, counsel assisting the royal commission, said Ridsdale abused children “at parishes or church locations throughout Victoria” from the 1960s to 1980s, including in Mildura, Swan Hill, Warrnambool, Apollo Bay, Ballarat and Mortlake.

Gail Furness, counsel assisting the royal commission, said Ridsdale abused children “at parishes or church locations throughout Victoria” from the 1960s to 1980s, including in Mildura, Swan Hill, Warrnambool, Apollo Bay, Ballarat and Mortlake.

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

Church says it won’t use ‘Ellis defense’ in sex abuse cases

AUSTRALIA
Digital Journal

By Megan Hamilton

Ballarat – After conferring with the archbishops of Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, Francis Sullivan, head of the Catholic Church’s Truth, Justice and Healing Council, reiterated their pledge to keep the Ellis defense in the past and not the present or future.

Sullivan’s comments arrive just as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse (RCIRCSA) began hearings on Monday regarding cases of abuse in Ballarat, CathNews reports.

What is the Ellis defense?

John Ellis was an altar boy who suffered sexual abuse during the 1970s, and when he tried to sue the church over the abuse, the courts rejected the claim, ruling that the Church wasn’t a legal entity, and it wasn’t liable for abuse committed by a priest, A.M. reports.

This was labeled the “Ellis defense” and the Catholic Church has used this tactic for years to avoid making payments to those who are survivors of sexual abuse, A.M. reports.

There’s been conflicting reports about what the Church was planning to do, and earlier on Monday, The Age reported that the Church was planning to use this controversial defense.

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.

Bishop knew of clergy abuse: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

BY MEGAN NEIL AAP MAY 19, 2015

A BALLARAT bishop knew Australia’s worst pedophile priest had abused boys when he moved him between parishes with Cardinal George Pell involved in at least one decision to move him, an inquiry has heard.

THEN Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns knew Father Gerald Francis Ridsdale had abused boys “so he was taken out of there” and again moved to another parish, the abuse royal commission heard on the opening day of three weeks of hearings in the city devastated by decades of abuse.

Senior counsel assisting the commission Gail Furness SC said Ridsdale was discussed at a meeting of the bishop’s advisers – the College of Consultors – in September 1982, where Cardinal Pell was present.
The meeting minutes say the bishop advised it had become necessary for Ridsdale to move from Mortlake parish, but do not disclose what reasons Bishop Mulkearns gave.

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.

Cardinal George Pell may have known …

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

Cardinal George Pell may have known about priest’s crimes against children, royal commission hears

May 19, 2015

Jane Lee

Cardinal George Pell may have known about disgraced priest Gerald Ridsdale’s crimes against children years before he faced charges and may have been involved in decisions to move him between parishes, a royal commission has heard.

Counsel Assisting the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Gail Furness, SC, described on Tuesday how the College of Consultors – a group of priests who advised the Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns – decided to move Ridsdale between parishes.

Cardinal Pell, who supported Ridsdale at his first court appearance on child sex offences in 1993, was previously a member of the group. Now a Prefect for the Economy of the Holy See in Rome, Cardinal Pell has repeatedly denied knowing children were abused in Ballarat when he was there.

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

Ballarat suffered an epidemic of child rape and torment

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Jack The Insider
Columnist

Today the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse begins public hearings in Ballarat. It is a Herculean task.

Much but not all of the abuse occurred within the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Catholic Church’s Ballarat Diocese. The Royal Commission has examined profound failures to protect children in a range of institutions, religious and secular, government and non-government. This time it must deal with the sordid business of Catholic clerical abuse within the Ballarat Diocese.

The Ballarat Diocese extends across most of western Victoria, from Portland in the southwest of the state along the south coast, excluding Geelong, all the way north to the border city of Mildura in the state’s northwest corner. There is not a country town or city in that vast geographical space not affected by clerical child sex abuse.

It was an epidemic of rape and torment of children. I have ventured that nowhere in Australia has there been more institutional child sex abuse and as far as I know nowhere else on the planet.

Some of the culprits are well known. There is Gerard Ridsdale, a now laicised priest serving an 18 year jail sentence. By his own admission he counts his victims in the hundreds. There is Christian Brother, Robert Best jailed for 14 years. Many of his victims lived in the Ballarat diocese.

And finally there is Monsignor John Day, a name that has stubbornly refused to seep into the national consciousness. Day has been the subject of more than a hundred Towards Healing claims. He was a pedophile who monstered children for five decades in Horsham, Ballarat, Apollo Bay, Beech Forest, Colac, Ararat and Mildura.

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.

Gross violations by clergy in Ballarat

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

The impacts of the gross violations of children by Catholic clergy in Ballarat has been felt throughout the community, the royal commission chair says.

Justice Peter McClellan says a public hearing in Ballarat will hear the personal stories of a number of survivors as well as perpetrators of the abuse.

‘That evidence will describe the gross violations of individuals by ordained members of the Catholic Church,’ Justice McClellan said on Tuesday.Justice McClellan was told of the significant scale of the abuse in the Ballarat region during private sessions in the Victorian regional city.

He said the great suffering of many people extended beyond individual survivors to their families and friends.

‘The impacts have been felt throughout the community,’ he said.

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

May 18, 2015

‘Not bishop’s job to report abuse’

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A Ballarat bishop did not think it was his job to tell police about child abuser Gerald Francis Ridsdale, Australia’s worst pedophile priest.

Ridsdale is believed to have abused every boy aged between 10 and 16 at the school in the Victorian town of Mortlake, the royal commission looking into abuse by clergy and other members of the Catholic Church in the Ballarat diocese has heard.

Senior counsel assisting the commission Gail Furness SC said Ridsdale was a prolific offender while parish priest in Mortlake from January 1981.

‘There will be evidence that his behaviour around boys was no secret in Mortlake,’ Ms Furness said on Tuesday.

Ms Furness said it was not until June 1988 that Ridsdale was suspended for 12 months, 13 years after the Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns first knew that he was sexually abusing boys he met during his work as a priest.

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

Pedophile Gerald Ridsdale gives evidence from jail at abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

TESSA AKERMAN THE AUSTRALIAN MAY 19, 2015

A former student of Ballarat’s St Alipius Boys Primary School has told the Royal Commission it was a place of “true evil’’ where up to dozen of his Year 4 classmates went on to take their own lives after they were abused.

Giving evidence on the first day of hearings in the Victorian town, Philip Nagle said he was abused as a boy at the school and his home by St Alipius teacher Brother Stephen Francis Farrell.

He told the commission that he knew when an attack was coming because his teacher would remove his glasses.

Mr Nagle said the abuse started when he was in grade five and had Brother Farrell as a teacher.

Later that year at a school camp, Mr Nagle first thought of taking his own life.

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

Child abuse royal commission…

AUSTRALIA
Radio Australia

Child abuse royal commission: Priest abused every young boy at regional Victorian school, inquiry hears

By court reporter Peta Carlyon

The child abuse royal commission is set to hear details of the “gross violations” of victims by members of the Catholic Church in the regional Victorian city of Ballarat.

A notorious paedophile priest abused every boy at a regional Victorian school between the age of 10 and 16, the child sex abuse inquiry has heard.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is holding long-awaited public hearings in Ballarat to examine historical abuse suffered by children at a number of schools in the regional centre, at the hands of Catholic clergy and other members of the Church.

Some of Australia’s most notorious abusers were part of a paedophile ring operating in and around Ballarat for years, including Gerald Ridsdale, Robert Best and Edward Dowlan.

In her opening address, Senior Counsel Assisting the Commission, Gail Furness SC, outlined the extent of Ridsdale’s offending.

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.

Cardinal George Pell may have aided cover-up …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Cardinal George Pell may have aided cover-up of Australia’s worst paedophile, royal commission hears

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN MAY 19, 2015

CARDINAL George Pell may have unwittingly helped protect Australia’s worst paedophile priest by moving him between parishes and covering up his evil crimes, it had been alleged.

In explosive allegations before the royal commission into sexual abuse this morning it was alleged the high-ranking Cardinal sat on a committee that protected notorious paedophile Gerald Ridsdale.

Ridsdale, who has spent decades behind bars, has admitted molesting at least 54 victims but it has been estimated he molested more than 200 children while being shuffled around parishes.

Cardinal Pell has persistently denied knowing the extent of offending by notorious paedophile Gerald Ridsdale before he controversially accompanied him to a court hearing in 1993.

But the commission heard this morning he sat on a committee in September 1982 that considered Ridsdale’s offending when deciding to move him on.

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.

Disgraced priest Gerald Ridsdale to face child sex abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Age

May 19, 2015

Jane Lee

One of Australia’s most notorious paedophile priests, Gerald Ridsdale, will give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Allegations of Sexual Abuse during its first hearing in Ballarat.

The former Catholic priest and serial child sex offender will give evidence via video link from prison, where he is serving time for 30 offences committed against 14 children.

It is the first time a convicted perpetrator will publicly provide evidence to the royal commission in Victoria.

Ridsdale, 81, was part of a notorious paedophile ring involving the clergy that operated in Ballarat in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s.

Seventeen male victims of child sexual abuse at Catholic-run schools in Victoria will also give evidence at the Ballarat hearing.

One survivor will tell the commission that of 33 boys in his 1974 grade four class at the now-closed St Alipius Boys’ School, 12 are believed to have taken their own lives.

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

St Patrick’s College to share royal commission focus

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By ALEX HAMER May 18, 2015

THE royal commission will hear how paedophile Edward Dowlan was allowed to continue teaching years after his abuse of children became common knowledge among Ballarat’s clergy.

St Patrick’s College is one of the five Roman Catholic institutions in Ballarat to come under the microscope in a three-week sitting, which starts on Tuesday.

College headmaster John Crowley, in a statement to students and parents on Friday, said he would attend the hearings. “The coming weeks will be a very difficult time for both victims/survivors of sexual abuse, as well as the broader St Patrick’s College community, including many past Christian Brothers who have committed their lives to educating and inspiring young men in the Edmund Rice tradition,” he said.

“Our thoughts and prayers will be with the victims/survivors throughout this time. It is important that their stories are heard and listened to.

“It is for this reason that I will attend the royal commission as the college’s representative.”

Dowlan was sentenced to 12 months in prison in March for abusing boys at the school in 1973 and 1974, as well as in five other schools. It is expected his victims will give evidence to the royal commission.

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Attorney: Archdiocese, abuse victim reach $1.25M settlement

CHICAGO (IL)
14 News

CHICAGO (AP) –
An attorney says the Archdiocese of Chicago has reached a $1.25 million settlement with a man who claims he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest.

Plaintiff’s attorney Eugene Hollander announced Monday the settlement was reached over the weekend.

The plaintiff, now in his 20s, claimed Daniel McCormack repeatedly abused him while he was a fourth- and fifth grader at St. Ailbe Catholic School on the South Side.

McCormack was removed from the priesthood and pleaded guilty in 2007 to abusing five children at St. Agatha parish in Chicago. He was sentenced to five years in prison, and remains at a state mental health facility. He was charged last year in a 2005 case involving a 10-year-old victim at St. Agatha.

A message seeking comment was left for the archdiocese.

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Seattle Archdiocese paying $1.2 million to settle abuse case

WASHINGTON
Q13 Fox

BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) — The Seattle Archdiocese has agreed to pay $1.2 million to settle a lawsuit brought by a woman who said she was molested by a priest in the 1960s and ’70s.

Jeri Hubbard, a 63-year-old from Sedro Woolley, sued in Whatcom County Superior Court in 2012, alleging she was abused by former priest Michael Cody, who was pastor of St. Charles Parish in Burlington and Assumption Parish in Bellingham.

In a deposition, Cody, now 84, acknowledged having inappropriately touched girls, but said he didn’t have relations with Hubbard until after she turned 18.

Her lawyers, including Seattle attorney Michael Pfau and Mount Vernon attorney John Murphy, said a psychiatrist in 1962 advised then-Archbishop Thomas Connelly that Cody had molested at least eight girls. The archbishop sent Cody to treatment but allowed him to return to work.

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

Archdiocese admits molestation by priest with local ties

WASHINGTON
KIRO

By Alison Grande

A Sedro-Woolley woman who was molested by a priest settled for $1.2 million dollars Monday after she sued the Seattle Archdiocese.

Jeri Hubbard, 63, was sexually abused as a teenager by Father Michael Cody at St. Charles Parish in Burlington. Hubbard’s attorneys say the Seattle Archdiocese knew Father Cody was a pedophile and instead of taking action, just moved him from parish to parish allowing him to victimize more children.

The Archdiocese settled during Hubbard’s trial in Whatcom County Superior Court, admitted it acted negligently and recklessly.

KIRO 7’s Alison Grande spoke with Hubbard in Mt Vernon today and is putting together her story for KIRO 7 Eyewitness News at 6 p.m.

“The Archdiocese of Seattle acknowledged responsibility for the emotional distress of Michael Cody’s victim in keeping with our commitment to healing we worked to reach a fair and just resolution,” Seattle Archdiocese spokesman Greg Magnoni 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.

Sex abuse lawsuit aims to compel Diocese of Duluth to release files

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran May 18, 2015

A woman sued the Diocese of Duluth on Monday as part of an effort to force the Catholic diocese to release thousands of documents on priests accused of child sexual abuse.

In the lawsuit, Quin Buchtel said the Rev. Charles Gormly sexually abused her during his tenure at St. Francis of Assisi in Brainerd, Minn. Buchtel said the abuse took place from about 1960 to 1961, when she was 12 to 13 years old.

Gormly died in 1968.

“I’m coming forward on behalf of other victims,” Buchtel said at a news conference Monday.

“Hopefully by seeing me come forward and using my name, they will feel comfortable to do that, also.”

The lawsuit filed in St. Louis County accuses the Duluth diocese of creating a public nuisance by not warning the public about Gormly and other priests who had been accused of abusing children. It also accuses the diocese of negligence, arguing that the diocese “knew or should have known that Gormly was a danger to children” in the 1960s.

Buchtel is seeking more than $50,000 in damages and a court order that would require the diocese to release its files on priests accused of sexually abusing children.

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.

Mother sues Catholic church after administrators accuse her of child abuse

KANSAS
KSHB

[with video]

Brendaliss Gonzalez
6:45 PM, May 18, 2015

SHAWNEE, Kan. – A Kansas woman is suing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas, alleging administrators falsely accused her of child abuse.

The woman’s attorney filed the lawsuit against the Diocese, Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Shawnee and the principal for the church’s school last week.

According to the lawsuit, Melissa Schroeder claims she first notified her daughter’s teacher of bullying against her daughter in April 2014.

She also notified the Sacred Heart School’s principal later that month.

However, she alleges nearly a month later, nothing was done, even after she provided notes from her daughter’s doctor stating the girl was suffering from severe migraines possible caused by “some of the bullying at school.”

According to the lawsuit, the principal told Schroeder that “perhaps this school is not for you.”

Schroeder alleges she later found out the principal filed a complaint against her to the Kansas Department for Children and Families (DCF) alleging that she “was abusing and neglecting her ten-year-old daughter.”

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Woman sues Duluth diocese, claims priest sexually abused her as a child

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By Tom Olsen Today

More than half a century has passed, but Quin Buchtel says she still is dealing with the effects of being sexually abused by her priest.

Buchtel has long battled what she describes as severe chronic depression — requiring hospitalization at least four times — and said Monday that her life has been marked by a series of “questionable choices.”

“I would like to know what my life would’ve been had I not been abused by this priest,” she said. “I don’t know if what he did resulted in my anger, which turned ultimately into depression, or not. But I feel that it must’ve had some impact on my life as an adult.”

Buchtel, a 65-year-old social worker living in Olivia, Minn., filed a lawsuit Monday against the Diocese of Duluth, alleging that she was abused by the Rev. Charles Gormly in the early 1960s.

Her lawsuit is the fourth filed against the Duluth diocese under the Minnesota Child Victims Act, which opened a three-year window for victims of decades-old abuse to file claims.

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.

Rape Jokes: Comedians, Please Stop Using My Trauma for Your Material

UNITED STATES
The Good Men Project

May 18, 2015 by Christopher M. Anderson

Comedians, if it’s not too much trouble – can you please stop using me and millions of other rape and sexual abuse survivors as a punch line?

I mean, come on Louis C.K. – do you think that just because you allowed your character to be raped on your show (perhaps more than once) that somehow you could get away with comparing pedophilia to your love of candy on Saturday Night Live this past weekend?

And hey- everyone at Saturday Night Live (especially you Pete Davidson, Cecily Strong, and Keenan Thompson)- don’t for a second try to pass off that Teacher Trial skit last month as some kind of piercing commentary on Barbara Walters’ recent interview of child rapist Mary Kay LaTourneau. It was nothing more than a shameless and unapologetic reinforcement of every toxic stereotype of male sexual victimization.

Look – I’m not trying to call for a ban on all rape jokes. I actually think the “Football Town Nights” piece from this season’s Inside Amy Schumer was masterfully done (and the rare exception that proves the rule that rape isn’t comedic). And I’m not saying we should not speak of these matters ever – far from it. Rape and sexual assault thrive on silence.

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.

Duluth Diocese Sued After Sexual Abuse Allegations

MINNESOTA
Fox 21

Avery Neuville, Reporter, aneuville@kqdsfox21.tv

DULUTH, Minn. –
A 65 year old, Oliver woman, is suing the Diocese of Duluth over allegations of Sexual Abuse.

“What a real big deal this was in our life that was totally glossed over by our school and perish,” said Sexual Abuse Survivor, Quin Buchtel.

Buchtel says she was sexually abused by Father Charles Gormly, who is now dead, in a Brainard Church in 1960.

Her lawsuit asks the Diocese to publicly release the names and documents of all clergy accused of child sex abuse.

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

Controversial school chaplain Illo ousted at Star of the Sea

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
SFGate

By C.W. Nevius on May 18, 2015

The announcement that priest Joseph Illo would be removed (see final item) as chaplain of Star of the Sea School took a lot of people by surprise, but was Illo one of them?

The controversial pastor of the Star of the Sea parish sent out an odd letter to parents and faculty last week that said, “indications thus far are that I will remain administrator of Star of the Sea Parish for the foreseeable future.” However, nothing is said about the school.

We now know that Bishop Salvatore Cordileone has replaced Illo with Father Vito Perrone, who had been at Mater Dolorosa Church in South San Francisco. Perrone has quickly set out to lower the volume of the discussion about gender roles and morality pamphlets that’s been raging around the school for the past few months and reassure school parents.

“Father Vito showed up and the first thing he did was schedule 40-minute appointments with every parent,” said Christy Brooks, who has a sixth and a fourth grader at the school. “He’s a wonderful human being and a wonderful spiritual teacher.”

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.

Haiti justice ministry grants appeal of abuse case against US citizen who runs orphanage

HAITI
Daily Reporter

By DAVID McFADDEN Associated Press
First Posted: May 18, 2015

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian justice authorities are making plans for a new criminal trial against a U.S. citizen who has been accused of physically and sexually abusing boys in an orphanage that he has run for decades in the impoverished Caribbean country, a top government official and lawyers said Monday.

Michael Geilenfeld, an Iowa native and former brother with Mother Teresa’s Brothers of Charity, opened the St. Joseph’s Home for Boys in the Haitian capital in 1985. He was arrested in September, but freed last month when a Haitian judge dismissed the case following a brief trial that was not attended by the five accusers, now adults.

Justice Minister Pierre-Richard Casimir told The Associated Press that an appeal filed by lawyers for the alleged victims, allowing the case to be re-examined, has been granted. Without disclosing specifics, he said Monday the prosecutor “didn’t do the case correctly” and has since been sanctioned.

“There should be another trial in this case,” Casimir said in a phone interview.

Manuel Jeanty, a lawyer for the accusers, said he and his clients were not notified about the recent trial beforehand, but hope they “will see justice” in Haiti now that an appeal has been granted.

Defense lawyer Alain Lemithe said he and other attorneys are prepared to “go back to court to defend Mr. Geilenfeld’s interests.” He alleged that the government’s decision to grant the appeal was made “under pressure,” adding that “what they are doing is not illegal but it’s very unusual.”

Geilenfeld’s lawyers blame an email and blog campaign by U.S. activist Paul Kendrick of Freeport, Maine for their client’s arrest, and for the granting of the appeal.

Kendrick, co-founder of the Maine chapter of a Catholic lay reform group, launched a campaign against Geilenfeld in 2011 after learning of the abuse allegations.

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

How does rabbi’s mikvah-peeping jail sentence stack up?

UNITED STATES
JTA

By Uriel Heilman
May 18, 2015

(JTA) – Rabbi Barry Freundel was sentenced to 6 1/2 years in prison for installing hidden cameras in the mikvah shower room adjacent to his synagogue and surreptitiously recording naked women.

The sentence meted out last Friday in D.C. Superior Court represented 45 days each for the 52 counts of misdemeanor voyeurism to which Freundel, the longtime rabbi of the Orthodox Washington congregation Kesher Israel, pleaded guilty in February. The terms will be served successively.

How does the sentence stack up with other prison terms doled out to Jews in America for their high-profile crimes?

Here are some cases for comparison:

Perpetrator: Rabbi Baruch Lanner, principal of an Orthodox yeshiva high school in New Jersey and an official at the Orthodox Union’s National Conference of Synagogue Youth.
Arrest date: March 2001.
Crimes: Child endangerment, aggravated criminal sexual contact, sexual contact and harassment.
Plea: Not guilty.
Sentence: 7 years in prison. Lanner began serving his sentence in 2005 and was paroled in 2008.

Perpetrator: Nechemya Weberman, an unlicensed therapist in Brooklyn’s Satmar Hasidic community.
Arrest date: Feb. 23, 2011.
Crimes: 59 counts of sexual abuse against a teenage girl.
Plea: Not guilty.
Sentence: 103 years in prison.

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Freundel To Appeal

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Jewish Week

05/18/15
Hannah Dreyfus
Staff Writer

Rabbi Barry Freundel will appeal the 6.5-year sentence he received for 52 counts of misdemeanor voyeurism, according to his lawyer, Jeffery Harris, who said the sentence was “illegal.”

Rabbi Freundel was sentenced to six and a half years in prison on Friday for videotaping dozens of nude women at a ritual bath.

“You repeatedly and secretly violated the trust your victims had in you and you abused your power,” Senior Judge Geoffrey Alprin of D.C. Superior Court said at the sentencing, the Washington Post reported. Alprin also fined Freundel more than $13,000.

Bethany Mandel, one of Freundel’s victims who attended the sentencing, said she thought the sentence was fair.

“A lot of us worried that he would only be given a year,” she said. “We wanted this crime to be taken seriously, not for our own sake, but because if sexual crimes of this nature go largely unpunished, people will be more hesitant to press similar charges in the future.” Freundel’s sentence set an important precedent, she said.

In February, Freundel pleaded guilty to 52 counts of misdemeanor voyeurism for installing secret cameras in the shower room of the mikvah adjacent to Kesher Israel, the prominent Washington Orthodox synagogue he led for some 25 years.

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Survivors’ stories: Child sex abuse inquiry revives painful memories

AUSTRALIA
Radio Australia

Margaret Burin

As the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse begins its first public hearings in Ballarat, five victims call for recognition, justice and a national scheme to support survivors.

As Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse begins its first public hearings in Ballarat, five victims have called for recognition, justice and a national scheme to support survivors.

During the 1960s and 1970s, a notorious paedophile ring preyed on children in the regional Victorian city of Ballarat.

Catholic priest Gerald Ridsdale, Brother Robert Best, Brother Ted Dowlan and Brother Stephen Frances Farrell were among the convicted paedophiles who operated in the area.

Beginning on Tuesday, May 19 and continuing for the next three weeks, the royal commission will hear evidence from survivors of abuse at Catholic Church institutions in Ballarat.

They will hear evidence from students, parents and other witnesses, as well as the response of five Catholic institutions to clergy abuse.

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Another Lawsuit Filed Against Diocese of Duluth

MINNESOTA
WDIO

An Olivia, Minnesota woman spoke out on Monday, about her alleged abuse at the hands of Father Charles Gormly, who served in the Diocese of Duluth.

“I was molested by Father Gormly. But I was abused by the Diocese, because I believe the nuns knew what was going on, the other priests knew, and that the Diocese must have known,” explained Quin Buchtel.

She was a girl at a school in Brainerd when the alleged abuse took place, approximately 1960-1961. It came up again in her life when she attended a school reunion, and she said her classmates discussed what had happened to them.

Buchtel said when she checked in the 90s if anything could be done, she was told the statue of limitations had been reached. But recently, the Minnesota legislature lifted that limitation, so more alleged victims could come forward.

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Seattle Archdiocese to pay $1.2 million to settle sex abuse suit

WASHINGTON
Seattle Times

By Sara Jean Green
Seattle Times staff reporter

A 63-year-old Sedro-Woolley woman who sued the Seattle Archdiocese over sexual abuse she says she suffered as a child reached a $1.2 million settlement with church officials late Sunday night, days before the civil case was to go to a Whatcom County jury, according to her attorneys.

Jerri Hubbard accused Father Michael Cody of sexually abusing her in the late 1960s and early 1970s when Cody served as pastor of the St. Charles Parish in Burlington, Whatcom County, according to her lawsuit. He was also pastor of Assumption Parish in Bellingham during that time.

The Seattle Times does not typically name alleged victims of sex crimes, but Hubbard agreed to be publicly identified, according to her lawyers.

Hubbard was sexually abused after a psychiatrist diagnosed Cody as a pedophile in 1962, and at that point, church officials knew he had already molested at least eight young girls under the age of 12, Hubbard’s attorneys — Michael Pfau, John W. Murphy and Rand F. Jack — said in a news release Monday.

Archbishop Thomas Connelly sent Cody to treatment but then allowed him to return to the church and transferred him to St. Charles Parish, despite knowing he was a danger to children, Hubbard’s attorneys said.

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Reduced sentence is an insult to victims of paedo priest

IRELAND
Sunday World

By Caoimhe Young

ROT in hell are the words I would usually use for paedophiles and this week one pervert had his prison sentence reduced from six to two years.

The judge in the case said he was taking the “significant contribution” the convicted man made to his community into account.

Patrick Barry was the principal of a Co. Clare school, the type you’d love your kid to go to because the classes are small and everyone looks out for everyone.

This was 30 years ago and it was a two-teacher school.

In fact, Barry was so sure of his position of power in Moyasta National School that he indecently assaulted 11 girls there from 1964 to 1985 in front of the whole class.

Ancient history? Not if he did it to you.

One girl said: “He took advantage of us, he used to grope at us at every opportunity.

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Attorney: $1.25M settlement in sex abuse suit against Archdiocese, McCormack

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

LeeAnn Shelton

The Archdiocese of Chicago has reached a $1.25 million settlement with a man who claimed he was sexually abused by convicted child molester and former priest Daniel McCormack.

The plaintiff’s attorney, Eugene Hollander, announced the settlement Monday, saying “while it has been a difficult journey, my client refused to suffer in silence.”

The $1.25 million settlement was reached over the weekend, Hollander said. The case had been scheduled to go to trial later this month.

The plaintiff, now in his 20s, claimed McCormack repeatedly abused him when he was in the fourth and fifth grades at St. Ailbe parish on the South Side, according to a statement from Hollander.

The plaintiff said he had suppressed the memories of abuse, but started to remember what happened in 2011 after seeing news coverage of the Jerry Sandusky scandal at Penn State, the statement said.

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Attorney: Catholic Church Settles Another McCormack Sex Abuse Lawuit

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

CHICAGO (CBS) — A lawyer for an alleged sex abuse victim said the Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago has settled another lawsuit involving former priest Daniel McCormack.

Attorney Eugene Hollander said his client, a man now in his late 20s, will receive a settlement of $1.25 million from the church.

The plaintiff in the lawsuit claimed McCormack abused him at the former priest’s first parish assignment, St. Ailbe Church, at 90th and Harper.

“The client is really struggling,” Hollander said. “He was sexually abused in 4th and 5th grade; primarily 4th grade.”

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Lawsuit Filed Against Duluth Diocese

MINNESOTA
KDAL

by Dave Strandberg

DULUTH, MN (KDAL) – The Duluth Diocese has been named in a lawsuit filed Monday by a woman who was molested by a priest in Brainerd in the early 1960’s. The attorney for Quin Buchtel, Michael Finnegan, says the diocese should have known that Father Charles Gormly was a danger to children before the plaintiff was molested. The suit says the Diocese of Duluth continues to conceal information about pedophile priests and asks that all information be publicly released. Buchtel is also seeking damages in excess of 50 thousand dollars plus costs.

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Attorney: $1.25M Settlement in Sex Abuse Suit Against Chicago Archdiocese, McCormack

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

[with video]

The Archdiocese of Chicago has reached a $1.25 million settlement with a man who claimed he was sexually abused by convicted child molester and former priest Daniel McCormack.

The plaintiff’s attorney, Eugene Hollander, announced the settlement Monday, saying “while it has been a difficult journey, my client refused to suffer in silence.”

The $1.25 million settlement was reached over the weekend, Hollander said. The case had been scheduled to go to trial later this month.

The plaintiff, now in his 20s, claimed McCormack repeatedly abused him when he was in the fourth and fifth grades at St. Ailbe parish on the South Side, according to a statement from Hollander.

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Archdiocese settles sex abuse claim for $1.25 million, attorney says

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Manya Brachear Pashman
Chicago Tribune

A man in his late 20s who said he was abused by former priest and convicted sex offender Daniel McCormack settled a claim with the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago for $1.25 million, according to his attorney.

The settlement, reached this weekend, eclipses a trial that was set to begin May 26, for which the late Cardinal Francis George provided video-recorded testimony before his death.

The victim claimed that he was repeatedly sexually assaulted during the fourth and fifth grades by McCormack while he was a student at St. Ailbe Catholic Church on Chicago’s South Side, said the plaintiff’s attorney, Eugene Hollander.

The man said he suppressed the memories of the childhood abuse until he heard news about the Jerry Sandusky scandal at Penn State University in 2011. He filed a lawsuit in Cook County Circuit Court the following year.

Hollander said unlike most of the sexual abuse claims against McCormack, the alleged abuse of his client occurred at McCormack’s first pastoral assignment. McCormack was assigned to St. Ailbe’s from 1994 to 1997.

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St Alipius Parish School under the spotlight

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By ALEX HAMER May 18, 2015

AS A former haven for paedophile priests, St Alipius Parish School will be under the spotlight in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Abuse, which starts in Ballarat on Tuesday.
.
The actions of four men who either taught at the school or held positions of responsibility in the school, such as priest Gerald Ridsdale as chaplain, under the Christian Brothers, will again be detailed and survivors will tell their horrific stories from the 1960s and ’70s.

School principal Eileen Rice said they had been open with pupils about the school’s history to make clear no such abuse would ever happen again.

“We will be making sure that our community knows this school is very different from the one that these children went to, and that they know and feel that the children are safe here,” she said. “We know that when children are abused, that stays with them into adulthood. It’s the past for us; it’s very much the presence of victims and survivors.”

The abuse committed by Ridsdale and Christian Brothers Robert Best, Edward Dowlan and Stephen Farrell have been linked to dozens of suicides by victims and has seen all found guilty of child sex crimes.

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THE DIOCESE OF YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO AND THE FRANCISCAN FRIARS T.O.R. DISRESPECT SUICIDE VICTIM ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS DEATH AND CONTINUE TO RE-VICTIMIZE HIS FAMILY AND FELLOW VICTIMS

OHIO
Road to Recovery

The Diocese of Youngstown, Ohio and the Franciscan Friars, T.O.R. are re-victimizing the family of a deceased sexual abuse victim of Br. Stephen P. Baker, T.O.R. at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio and other clergy sexual abuse victims by refusing to settle their claims in a fair and timely manner and allowing the victims and their families to heal and find closure.

Barbara Aponte of Poland, Ohio, mother of Luke Bradesku, innocent childhood sexual abuse victim of Br. Stephen P. Baker, will commemorate her son’s tragic death on May 19, 2003 by demonstrating in front of the headquarters of the Youngstown, Ohio Diocese on the twelfth anniversary of his death to protest the foot-dragging by the Diocese of Youngstown and the Franciscan Friars T.O.R. in settling her son’s case and that of several other sexual abuse victims of Br. Stephen P. Baker at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio.

What
A demonstration and press conference alerting the media and general public regarding the foot-dragging and stalling tactics of the Diocese of Youngstown, Ohio, and the Franciscan Friars T.O.R. which refuse to settle claims of clergy sexual abuse victims in a fair, equitable, and timely manner.

When
Tuesday, May 19, 2015 at 11:00 am

(The 12th Anniversary of the Tragic Suicide Death of Clergy Sexual Abuse Victim Luke Bradesku)

Where
On the public sidewalk in front of the headquarters of the Diocese of Youngstown, Ohio, 144 West Wood Street, Youngstown, Ohio 44503, 330-744-8451.

Who
Barbara Aponte of Poland, Ohio, former teacher at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio, and grieving mother of Luke Bradesku, a suicide victim of Br. Stephen P. Baker, T.O.R. at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio; Robert M. Hoatson, Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families; other family members and former schoolmates of Luke Bradesku; other sexual abuse victims of Br. Stephen P. Baker, T.O.R.

Why
Luke Bradesku took his life on May 19, 2003 after suffering for many years from the effects of sexual abuse by Br. Stephen P. Baker at John F. Kennedy High School in Warren, Ohio. Twelve years later, the Diocese of Youngstown, Ohio and the Franciscan Friars T.O.R. continue to re-victimize his memory, his grieving mother and extended family, and other sexual abuse victims of Br. Stephen P. Baker by refusing to settle their claims in a fair and timely manner. Barbara Aponte, Luke Bradesku’s mother, and other demonstrators will demand of the Youngstown Catholic Diocese and the Franciscan Friars T.O.R. that they stop their feet-dragging and justly settle the claims of sexual abuse victims.

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

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Church says it will address past failures

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

The Christian Brothers say they are committed to addressing the failures of the past as the child abuse royal commission focuses on the Catholic Church’s dealings with pedophiles in Ballarat.

Ahead of Tuesday’s hearing in the Victorian regional city, Christian Brothers Oceania province leader Brother Peter Clinch has repeated the Catholic order’s apology to those abused while in their care.

“The Christian Brothers are steadfast in our commitment to address the failures of the past and to help bring some measure of healing to lives damaged by abuse,” Brother Clinch said in a statement.

“As we have done in the past and reiterate today, we acknowledge the great suffering inflicted as the result of actions of some of our own.”

Ballarat Bishop Paul Bird says the hearing will be very stressful for survivors, their families and people across the region.

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IL–Four charged in Catholic School bullying case

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, President of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

(312-399-4747, bblaine@snapnetwork.org)

We’re glad that four boys are being charged in a bullying case at a Chicago Catholic school. But we’re disturbed that for more than a month, no one reported the alleged crime to police.

[WLS]

In fact, it’s possible that not a single church or school official called law enforcement until after a parent did. WLS reports that “A parent and school representatives reported the incident to police on April 28.” To us, this suggests that a mom or dad likely made the first call and when Catholic officials heard about this, one of them hastily called shortly afterwards.

We hope our suspicions are wrong. We hope Archbishop Blase Cupich will be more honest about this case and who called law enforcement first. He should also aggressively seek out others who have been hurt and see little or no evidence that he is doing this.

We also hope that every single person who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes or cover ups at de Sales High School or other Catholic institutions will call police promptly. That’s the best way to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded and expose the truth.

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One family shares their story before telling it to child sexual abuse Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

[with video]

Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 18/05/2015
Reporter: Madeleine Morris

Notorious paedophiles in the Catholic Church in Ballarat have scarred the regional Victorian city and left intergenerational damage, as one family describes before telling their story to the Royal Commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse.

Transcript

LEIGH SALES, PRESENTER: Tomorrow, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heads to Ballarat. The regional Victorian city was home to some of the most notorious paedophiles Australia has ever seen. The effect of the abuse has been felt far wider than simply amongst the many victims. It’s intergenerational and it’s scarred the entire city.

Tonight, Madeleine Morris tells the story of one family who are set to share their experience tomorrow at the Royal commission.

MADELEINE MORRIS, REPORTER: Sunday is footy day in Ballarat. It’s all smiles at Eureka Stadium. But this city bears deep wounds.

TIM LANE: I think the impact of child abuse, you lock it away. You feel ashamed, even though you’ve done nothing wrong.

MADELEINE MORRIS: Over the next three weeks in Ballarat, the scars inflicted by paedophiles within the Catholic Church will be laid bare.

For Tim Lane and his family, it’s something they’ve lived with every day for the last 30 years.

TIM LANE: I remember there was an armchair there and I was about four and the lights were all off in the lounge room here and I think mum was out in the kitchen and all us kids and this Grant Ross was in here and he was fondling me right there. It’s clear as anything.

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PA–Ex Pittsburgh Catholic cleric sentenced for sex crimes

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Judy Jones, SNAP Midwest Associate Director, USA 636-433-2511. snapjudy@gmail.com

A Catholic cleric, who worked in Pittsburgh, has been convicted in Australia of a string of sex offenses.

He is Marianist Brother Bernard Joseph Hartman who taught for more than a decade (1986-97) at former North Catholic High School in Pittsburgh. His church supervisors learned of Australian allegations in 1997 and sent him for treatment and reassigned to ministry.

[USA Today]

As recently as 2008, Hartman was in active ministry in Ohio despite having apologized in writing almost a decade earlier to a girl he molested. Dayton church-goers told a journalist that Hartman had been sent to live at a church property in St. Louis Missouri where the Marianists are based.

His photo is available at BishopAccountability.org

We hope that Pittsburgh Catholic officials – with the diocese and with the Marianists – will do more to reach out to others who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by Hartman or cover ups by his colleagues.

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Wife tells court she lost 2-months pregnancy after pastor husband raped her

NIGERIA
Pulse

A 38-year-old make-up artist, Mary Iyayi, has urged a Lagos Island Customary Court to dissolve her two-year-old marriage to her husband, Pastor Samuel Iyayi, due to marital rape and sexual abuse.

She told the court that her husband raped her when she was two-months-old pregnant, causing her to lose the pregnancy.

“My husband raped me and I lost a two-month old pregnancy in the process. I want the dissolution of my two-year-old marriage.”

My pastor-husband held my hands to the wall, so I could not move. I told him that I was pregnant but he did not listen, until he forcefully had sex with me.

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Ballarat survivors of Catholic clergy abuse…

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Ballarat survivors of Catholic clergy abuse to deliver ‘brutal and horrific’ details to royal commission

LUCIE MORRIS-MARR HERALD SUN MAY 18, 2015

SURVIVORS of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in Ballarat say their evidence to a royal commission, beginning Tuesday, will cause outrage.

Steve Woods, 53, Andrew Collins, 47, Paul Lyons, 55, and Peter Blenkiron, 52, say their evidence of what went on locally in the 1960s and ’70s would be “brutal and horrific” and would help expose the full extent of the scandal.

“Our stories are shocking, and when people hear them in detail at these hearings there is going to be anger and upset,” Mr Woods said.

“It’s time for the full truth about what happened in Ballarat to be heard — and it’s not going to be easy to hear.

“So many of us were beaten and raped in the school by the men our parents trusted the most,” he said.

“But this is our moment and we deserve for our voices to be heard in the very town where it happened.”

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Children are safer thanks to sex abuse Royal Commission says Canberra victim

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

May 18, 2015

David Ellery
Reporter for The Canberra Times.

Australian children are less likely to be sexually abused in schools, church groups and elsewhere than before the establishment of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Allegations of Sexual Abuse, a former victim and commission witness says.

Damian De Marco, a former Marist Brothers Canberra student who testified about abuse and abuse cover-ups in the ACT last June, fears this may only be temporary however.

“One of the good things about the commission (hearings) is awareness of the problem is now so high and people are very watchful,” he said.

“They (people in authority) are not sceptical when complainants come forward. Children are safer – for now.

“But that’s not happening worldwide and, secondly, this (interest and concern) will die down some day. There is no guarantee the state of heightened awareness will be permanent.”

Mr De Marco said the only way to break the global cycle of abuse was for the church to address the
These included mandatory celibacy, discrimination against women in the leadership of the church, a culture of secrecy and obedience and the cult of clericalism in which clergy were “almost more than human”.

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Action against priest: Church awaits directions from Vatican

INDIA
Business Standard

Press Trust of India | Kochi May 18, 2015

Roman Catholic Church in Kerala is waiting for “directions” from the Vatican after taking initial action against a priest based on Canon law for allegedly raping a teenaged girl earlier this year.

Police had yesterday issued a lookout notice against Fr Edwin Figarez, a priest attached to the Lourdes Matha Church, Puthenvelikkara in Ernakulam district after Kerala High Court rejected his anticipatory bail plea.

The priest, who remained underground to evade the police, has been missing ever since the High Court rejected his anticipatory bail plea on May 5.

A spokesperson for Kottappuram Diocese said Figarez has been “suspended for the time being” from parish services after a pastoral commission appointed by the Bishop prepared a “preliminary report” about the alleged incident of sexually assaulting the 14-year-old in a church complex between the month of January and March this year, mostly when she came for confession.

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Ordinariate priest who entered civil partnership arrested over fraud allegations

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet (UK)

18 May 2015 by Paul Wilkinson

A priest of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham has been arrested for alleged fraud just weeks after returning from a year-long suspension over his involvement in a civil partnership.

Fr Donald Minchew, 67, was questioned by police last week during an investigation into claims of financial irregularities in January 2010, when he was a Church of England priest at the church of St Michael and All Angels in Croydon, south London. He was bailed until July.

Fr Minchew was suspended in March last year after he admitted entering into a civil partnership in 2008 with a Pakistani national, Mustajab Hussain. At the time he denied any sexual relationship, saying the civil partnership was a device to allow Hussain to stay in Britain. The Home Office investigated, and the partnership was dissolved.

When Fr Minchew was reinstated in the ordinariate earlier this year, its head, Mgr Keith Newton, said he had taken the decision “after much prayer and discussion”.

This week he told The Tablet that he had received assurances on at least two occasions from the Anglican Diocese of Southwark that claims of financial irregularity at St Michael’s did not involve Fr Minchew.

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Bashers falsely accused Apuron

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Written by
Mari Flor L. Herrero

Concerned Catholics? Indeed, this group seems to be very concerned, but there is very little of “Catholic” about them. If they are so concerned about our Church and its people, why is it that they have not said one single word on this issue of same sex unions? As well as many other issues which are affecting our community big time, such as suicide, teen pregnancy, adultery, drug-addiction, homelessness, sexual and spousal abuse and so on.

Truly concerned Catholics should be about seeking, practicing and witnessing to the truth. Instead, this group appears to be concerned about their perceived lack of control over the archdiocese’s top management, specifically its finances, and by extension their perceived lack of control over our archbishop’s actions and decisions.

Thus, they do not hesitate to spread rumors and consistently bash our archbishop. They should change their name to “Archbishop-Bashers.”

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UPDATE: 4 teens charged with attempted sex assault in St. Francis de Sales locker room

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

(CHICAGO) Four teenage boys have been charged as juveniles with the attempted sexual assault of an 18-year-old man inside a locker room in March at St. Francis de Sales High School.

The attack happened about 3 p.m. on March 23 at the Far South Side high school at 10155 S. Ewing Ave., according to Chicago Police.

A de Sales parent and school representatives reported the incident to police on April 28. On Saturday, four boys were arrested and charged with one count each of attempted criminal sexual assault, police said. A fifth boy initially questioned by detectives was not charged.

They have since been released to their parents and are scheduled to appear in juvenile court on June 8, police said.

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Local Catholics lose priest, fear church closure

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., May 16, 2015

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

GALLUP – Catholic parishioners in one Gallup church are losing their popular priest and their parish faces an uncertain future because of the alleged inappropriate actions of another priest elsewhere in the Diocese of Gallup.

Parishioners at St. John Vianney Parish were stunned to learn last weekend that Bishop James S. Wall is abruptly transferring the Rev. James E. Walker, their pastor for more than five years, to Bloomfield so Walker can take over the ministry duties of the Rev. Bob Mathieu, who has resigned.

According to a diocesan announcement delivered at Mathieu’s two parishes, St. Mary in Bloomfield and St. Rose of Lima in Blanco, Mathieu resigned “after some incidences of imprudence in the use of social media – Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.”

“These did not include anything illegal, or anything having to do with minors, but it was inappropriate, public, and contrary to the diocesan Pastoral Code of Ethics,” the announcement stated. “Bishop Wall wants to thank the parishioners who reached out to the diocesan officials with their concerns regarding Father Mathieu,” the statement added. “We continue to encourage all parishioners to continue to reach out to Bishop Wall or anyone at the Diocese if you have any concerns now or in the future.”

Mathieu did not respond to messages requesting comment that were left on his cell phone and sent to his email. Suzanne Hammons, the diocese’s media coordinator, declined to “speak to the details of the inappropriate social media use” in an email Friday.

‘Hearts are broken’

“I know that a lot of hearts are broken,” JoNell Becenti, St. John Vianney’s director of religious education, said of Walker’s transfer in a phone interview Wednesday.

In addition to losing Walker, parishioners were told their church would be reduced to the status of a chapel, with only two weekend Masses, no resident priest, and the loss of sacraments such as baptism, reconciliation, confirmation and marriage.

The Rev. Kevin Finnegan, the current diocesan chancellor and vicar general, is scheduled to take over the two Masses.

According to Becenti, an impromptu parish meeting on Monday evening drew about 40 parishioners, many of whom are upset by the loss of Walker and concerned that turning the church into a chapel is the diocese’s first step toward closing the parish.

Becenti said parishioners are wondering why a church with three weekend Masses “packed to the rim” is being targeted to lose its resident priest and be reduced to a chapel. They are seeking a meeting with the bishop to learn why this decision was made, she said.

“There are questions we want answered,” she said, “and we feel we’re being left in the dark.”

Becenti said she understood there was a “legitimate cause” to transfer a priest to fill Mathieu’s position, but she questioned why it couldn’t be one of the diocese’s newly ordained or soon-to-be-ordained young priests.

Walker had already retired, she explained, but was continuing to work at St. John Vianney, where under his pastoral leadership the parish was flourishing.

“I would understand if St. John Vianney was not thriving,” agreed local physician Lawrence Andrade, in a phone interview Wednesday.

Andrade, whose family formerly attended Sacred Heart Cathedral, said under Walker’s leadership the parish’s Masses were not only very well attended, the parking lot had to be recently expanded to accommodate the crowds, the religious education program for children was growing in enrollment, and a program for adults wanting to join the Catholic Church was about to be launched.

Andrade said he believes Wall should have replaced Mathieu with an assistant priest from a church that already has more than one priest. Andrade said plans are being made to circulate a petition during this weekend’s Masses requesting Wall reconsider all or part of his decisions concerning St. John Vianney.

‘Mass exodus’

Although Andrade said he was “shocked and angry all at the same time” by the bishop’s decision, he said he was also not surprised.

According to Andrade, there has been a “mass exodus” of Catholics leaving Sacred Heart Cathedral, with many now worshipping at St. John Vianney. While St. John Vianney’s congregation and weekly collection have been growing, he said, Cathedral’s attendance and collections have been dwindling.

Andrade attributed that exodus to the “conservative, overly reverent pre-Vatican II” changes imposed at Cathedral by Wall and the Rev. Matthew Keller, the Cathedral pastor and a close associate of the bishop.

“It made you feel like you were not even holy enough to be in the church,” Andrade said of the changes. “It was very unwelcoming,” he added, explaining he and his fellow physician wife “felt pushed away at the Cathedral.”

In contrast, Andrade said, they have found St. John Vianney to be a “very welcoming, uplifting and joyful” place to attend Mass.

Andrade said he believes Wall is catering to a “minority of conservatives that are driving the agenda” at Cathedral, and that the decision to transfer Walker and reduce St. John Vianney to a chapel is related to Cathedral’s declining attendance and collections.

“I think there’s some jealousy and anger,” Andrade said of Wall’s decision.

“His job is to bring people into the church,” Andrade said of the bishop. Instead, Andrade added, if Wall continues to impose his conservative, pre-Vatican II worship style on local Catholics, more will likely feel alienated and some will possibly leave the church.

Becenti said parishioners are determined to continue to attend Mass at St. John Vianney and “pack the parish” to show diocesan officials it is a viable church. Becenti said she believes the situation is a “test of faith” for parishioners.

If St. John Vianney is “on the road to being closed down,” Becenti said, “that is really, really going to frustrate and disappoint a lot of people.”

According to Becenti and Andrade, former city councilman Bryan Wall has asked chancery officials to arrange a meeting between parishioners and the bishop but was told the bishop was out of town. As of Friday, neither Becenti nor Andrade had heard if Wall has agreed to the meeting.

In her emailed response to media questions, Hammons said, “We also welcome any parishioner who has further concerns to come to us directly with questions or concerns, but we will not communicate using the press as a middleman.”

Hammons encouraged “anyone who has further questions” to contact the bishop’s office at 505-863-4406 ext. 24.

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Former Jesuit priest jailed for child pornography given permission to appeal against sentence

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Loukas Founten

A former Adelaide Jesuit priest and teacher jailed for child pornography offences has won permission to appeal against his sentence.

Stanislaus Hogan was found with more than 1,500 pornographic images in his private quarters at St Ignatius College in August 2013.

The 70-year-old had collected the books, videos and magazines showing boys aged between three and 16 over a number of years.

He argued he had used some of the material to help understand paedophiles as well as himself.

The Supreme Court was today told the sentencing judge did not give enough weight to Hogan’s early guilty plea, his rehabilitation efforts and low risk of reoffending, when he jailed him for two-and-a-half years.

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Indiana minister faces Kentucky child sex abuse charges

INDIANA
WHAS

GREENSBURG, Ind. (AP) – A southeastern Indiana minister faces child sexual abuse charges in Kentucky for allegedly molesting a child several times, including inside the church where he previously preached.

A grand jury in Lewis County, Kentucky, recently indicted 63-year-old Duncan D. Aker Jr. on sexual abuse and sodomy charges involving a victim under 12 years of age. He was arrested May 3 by Greensburg, Indiana, police on a Kentucky warrant.

Kentucky State Police spokesman Joe Veeneman says Akers was minister at the Vanceburg Christian Church at the time of the alleged abuse.

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Ballarat sexual abuse victims to tell royal commission suicide rate is ‘higher than road toll’

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Hamish Fitzsimmons

Survivors of sexual abuse by some members of the Catholic clergy in Ballarat say the region’s suicide rate is “through the roof”, in part because of the area’s toxic legacy of child molestation.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse will move to the regional Victorian city for hearings tomorrow.

Ballarat was one of the most horrific sites of abuse and it was revealed that in 1971 all the male teachers and the chaplain at the St Alipius primary school were molesting children.

One of Australia’s most notorious paedophiles, Father Gerald Ridsdale, will give live evidence to the commission via video link from prison, where he is serving an eight-year sentence for the rape and abuse of children, some of them as young as four.

Peter Blenkiron is one of the prominent campaigners for justice and redress for victims of abuse by the Catholic Church clergy.

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Catholic Church dismisses reports it will still use Ellis defence to block sexual abuse victim legal action

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The Catholic Church has dismissed reports it is planning to continue relying on a legal defence that blocks victims of child sexual abuse from taking action.

In 2007 the New South Wales Court of Appeal found the Catholic Church could not be sued for compensation because it was not a legal entity.

The decision ended a lengthy battle for Sydney lawyer John Ellis, who was sexually abused by a priest in the 1970s.

His experience was examined by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in March last year.

At the public hearing, former Archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell was asked whether the “Ellis defence”, as it has become known, should still be used.

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May 17, 2015

Lookout Notice against Priest

INDIA
The New Indian Express

KOCHI: The Kerala Police have issued a lookout notice against fugitive catholic priest Edwin Figarez, who is accused of sexually abusing a 14-year-old girl several times at a church at Puthenvelikkara.

The circular came 11 days after the HC dismissed Fr Figarez’s anticipatory bail on May 5, following which he is alleged to have gone into hiding. “He is likely to have left the state. We will extend the search to the other states soon,” said Puthenvelikkara sub-inspector M S Shibu, while dismissing the possibility of the priest leaving the country. “He had surrendered his passport to us on April 29.”

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Church to block victims’ court bids despite promise to abandon practice by Pell

AUSTRALIA
The Age

May 18, 2015

Chris Vedelago, Cameron Houston

The Catholic Church will continue to use a controversial legal defence to block victims of clerical abuse from seeking compensation, despite a promise to abandon the practice having been backed by Cardinal George Pell.

The church’s backflip comes as the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse sits today for a three-week hearing into decades of horrific abuse in the Diocese of Ballarat.

Fairfax Media can reveal a major rift between the country’s most influential bishops, religious orders and their insurers over the continued use of the so-called Ellis defence, which was supposedly disavowed in April 2014.

The internal ructions have prompted the church’s senior adviser on its response to the royal commission, Francis Sullivan, to call for church lawyers to “get with the program” and renounce the controversial legal precedent.

“Church leadership is about leading, not being led about by the nose by lawyers. That’s really what the royal commission is demonstrating to us,” Mr Sullivan said.

The Ellis defence is based on a 2007 NSW Court of Appeal decision that found the church cannot be sued for compensation because it does not technically exist as a legal entity.

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Terra incognita: The misguided cult of forgiveness of the ‘peeping rabbi’

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Jerusalem Post

By SETH J. FRANTZMAN \ 05/17/2015

In October of last year a well-known and very well-connected rabbi was taken from his synagogue-owned house in handcuffs.

In a story whose salacious details emerged over time, he was found to have put hidden cameras in a mikveh, or traditional religious bath, and to have taped women nude, many of them undergoing conversions that he was overseeing. He had meticulously cataloged the tapes, according to reports. Investigators identified 152 separate female victims, of which 88 fell within the statue of limitations for voyeurism. In February of 2015 Rabbi Barry Freundel plead guilty to 52 counts of taping these women without their consent.

On May 15 he was sentenced to six years in prison.

Open and shut case, right? And perhaps not a surprising one; other religious communities, such as the Catholic Church, have had sex scandals.

But throughout the Freundel story there was always a sense that something fishy was going on beneath the surface. Dr. Elana Sztokman, an author and feminist activist, connected the abuses to the “multiple layers of power, authority and gender hierarchy involved…a system of intricate rules about [women’s] bodies that have been determined by men.” She correctly noted that the way in which the rabbi encouraged women to use the mikveh (often in the form of “practice dunks”) was “nothing more than a smokescreen to allow him to watch them undress.”

She wondered why there “always seem to be some rabbis who inexplicably rush to the side of the perpetrator.”

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Have we become comfortably numb?

IRELAND
Questions from a Ewe

I arrived at Dublin airport only a few hours ago but in time to attend Sunday Mass at a nearby neighborhood church. Mass began with the deacon reading Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin’s pastoral reflections about Ireland’s upcoming constitutional referendum on marriage equality. Spoiler alert: he’s against it.

For those unfamiliar with this Friday’s referendum in Ireland, the proposed constitutional amendment would insert the following text in a new subsection to Article 41 of the Irish Constitution. “Marriage may be contracted in accordance with law by two persons without distinction as to their sex.”

Anyway, I was the first person to arrive for Mass – the very first – though I arrived about 10 minutes prior to Mass. The parking lot had but one vehicle as well so I began to question the accuracy of the Mass time posted on the internet. No worries, a priest greeted me at the door and reassured me that a Mass actually would start in a few minutes; I was just early, said he. Despite his reassurances, as I opened the door to the empty sanctuary the lyrics from Pink Floyd’s “Comfortably Numb” popped into my head…“Hello, hello, hello, is there anybody in there?”

I thought, “O.K., the stampeding herds here must slide into their pews just before Mass…kind of like Ty Cobb sliding into home base on a steal.” I sat awaiting the rush.

Well, if the teeming masses came to this Mass, they were invisible because what I saw was barely more people in the pews than on the altar. We had two priests, a deacon, a lector, an altar server and an old guy whose role never became clear to me – all to attend to just a few dozen mass goers. The PPP (priest per person) ratio was pretty high today, enough so to cause me to doubt lamentations about priest shortages.

As the deacon read the Archbishop’s statement, I found myself musing about what must be going through his mind as he reads this pastoral reflection practically to himself. I again heard Pink Floyd playing in my head, ”just nod if you can hear me…is there anyone at home?”

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Two city institutions to feature in probe

NORTHERN IRELAND
Londonderry Today

Northern Ireland’s public inquiry into child abuse is to investigate three more state-run institutions – two of which were in Londonderry, the chairman has said.

The Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) inquiry has extended its work to cover Hydebank Young Offenders Centre in south Belfast and former homes at Fort James and Harberton House, Londonderry.

Another section will focus on issues arising from the actions of paedophile priest Brendan Smyth, a serial child molester who frequented some Catholic residential homes, according to HIA chairman Sir Anthony Hart.

He is heading what was the UK’s largest probe into child abuse and has been investigating homes run by religious orders of nuns and brothers.

The treatment of children in church-run residential homes is a key concern of the investigation, which is considering cases between 1922 – when Northern Ireland was founded – and 1995.

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Hibbing priest accused of sex abuse free on bond

MINNESOTA
InForum

A Hibbing priest accused of inappropriately touching three girls has been released from jail on bond.

Court records indicate that the Rev. Brian Michael Lederer was released from the St. Louis County Jail on Thursday after posting bond. He had been held on $250,000 bail since his arrest last week.

Lederer is facing five felony criminal sexual conduct charges, the most serious of which carries up to 25 years in prison. He is accused of inappropriately touching three girls — all under the age of 16 — in incidents starting last year and continuing through last week.

A judge previously denied Lederer’s request for pretrial supervised release. He is due back in court on June 4.

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Pro-LGBT priest should be reappointed to N.J. school, petition says

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Erin O’Neill | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on May 17, 2015

SOUTH ORANGE — An online petition launched by students at Seton Hall University calls for reinstating a priest who said he was fired as director of campus ministry over his support for a LGBT rights campaign.

More than 2,200 people had signed the petition posted on Change.org as of Sunday afternoon. A Twitter hashtag was also created to support Rev. Warren Hall: #WeWantFatherHall.

Hall posted on Twitter on Friday afternoon that he was “fired from SHU for posting a pic on FB supporting LGBT ‘NO H8.’ I’m sorry it was met with this response. I’ll miss my work here.” The “No H8” campaign started in 2008 after California voters approved a measure to ban same-sex marriage.

Seton Hall University repeatedly responded to angry comments on Twitter, saying that the Hall’s position is managed by the Archdiocese of Newark.

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Cardinal Timothy Dolan to Le Moyne graduates: ‘Run the other way’

NEW YORK
Syracuse.com

By Elizabeth Doran | edoran@syracuse.com
on May 17, 2015

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, told Le Moyne graduates at Sunday’s graduation how important it is to “run the other way.”

On 9/11 in New York City, rescue workers and emergency personnel all were ” running the other way” toward the death and destruction rather than running away from it, Dolan said. They were running toward service and sacrifice, he said, and that’s the example to follow, he said.

“Wisdom inspires us to run the other way.” Dolan the told the 642 undergraduate students and their family and friends at the college’s 65th commencement this morning.

The selection of Dolan as commencement speaker was protested by some students because of his role in approving settlements of sexual abuse cases against priests. Le Moyne also awarded Dolan an honorary degree at the ceremony.

But there were no signs of protest during the graduation, and his talk was met applause and even cheers from some of the students.

“We’re glad you’re here,” one student yelled to Dolan as he finished walking in the processional behind the students. “‘Glad to be here,” Dolan yelled back.

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Agrupación de Laicos continúan con las manifestaciones contra el Obispo Juan Barros en Osorno

CHILE
Bio Bio

[The group that opposes Bishop Juan Barros of Osorno continues demonstrating against the prelate. This happened on Friday night when he held a ceremony of confirmation of young people in the parish of Our Lady of Lourdes in Rahue.]

El grupo de opositores al Obispo Juan Barros, en Osorno, continúa manifestándose contra el prelado. Así sucedió la noche del viernes, cuando éste celebraba una ceremonia de confirmación de jóvenes en la parroquia Nuestra Señora de Lourdes, en Rahue, donde llegaron sorpresivamente, realizando una funa en las afueras del recinto.

Según Mario Vargas, líder de la agrupación de Laicos y Laicas de Osorno, es contradictorio que una autoridad eclesiástica vinculada a Fernando Karadima esté entregando un sacramento a jóvenes.

Según dijo, continuarán con este tipo de movilizaciones, proyectando además otras acciones en la ciudad, además de eucaristías oficiadas por sacerdotes que han apoyado su movimiento pese a las órdenes de las altas jerarquías eclesiásticas.

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LeMoyne College President Linda LeMura on the Campbell Conversations

NEW YORK
WRVO

By GRANT REEHER

[with audio]

LeMoyne College has recently been through a couple of controversies lately, first about incidents related to its annual “Dolphy Day” student celebration, and then over its choice of Cardinal Timothy Dolan as its graduation speaker. This week on the Campbell Conversations, host Grant Reeher speaks with LeMoyne’s president, Linda LeMura, about those issues, and also about the value of a liberal arts education, a Jesuit-oriented liberal arts education, and the challenges that liberal arts education is currently facing. …

On the protests of some students over the choice of Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of the Diocese of New York, to speak at commencement.

Our former president selected him roughly 3 years ago. Actually we expected to have him as a speaker in the last couple of years, but his schedule precluded him from joining us sooner. He was selected because he’s one of the most important voices in Catholic education in America. He recently had a pretty big say in who would be elected the next pope, he had a vote. I think he’s going to be an incredibly compelling speaker. He’s gregarious, he has a wonderful sense of humor. There are some controversies, certainly, surrounding the Cardinal. But that’s okay, that’s what a Jesuit education is all about. We want our students to ask the hard questions. It’s a fantastic opportunity for us to learn from him.

Was the level of protest coming from some students a surprise?

To be completely forthcoming, yes it was. I never imagined the depth of concern. And, frankly, I underestimated our students. I underestimated their concern for social justice, their concern for those who have been abused and marginalized, their concerns for reparation for those who have been abused. My hat is off to these 20- and 21-year-olds, who are already beginning to see the big picture, which is a function of having a liberal arts education in our tradition.

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Accept fact of abuse: Catholic school principal

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MAY 18, 2015

John Ferguson
Victoria Editor
Melbourne

The principal of one of the schools deeply impacted by Catholic Church sexual abuse has appealed to his community to pray for the abused and prepare for weeks of distress as the royal commission seeks to make sense of the diocese’s dark history.

St Patrick’s College in the Victorian regional city of Ballarat is one of a series of schools hit hard by historical child-sex abuse perpetrated by members of the Christian Brothers fraternity.

The school is one of the best-known provincial Catholic schools in Australia, its students including former archbishop of Sydney Cardinal George Pell and a series of prominent sportsmen.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will tomorrow begin hearing three weeks of evidence into how the diocese of Ballarat severely bungled the handling of abuse, including shifting abusers from one parish to the next. It will focus on Ballarat during these hearings.

St Patrick’s headmaster John Crowley has warned students and parents at the school, about 110km west of Melbourne, about the looming publicity and is urging people to accept the role played by the school in abuse. However, he said that the abuse in question was historical.

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Catholic priest says he was fired …

NEW JERSEY
Washington Post

Catholic priest says he was fired from university job for Facebook post supporting gay rights

A priest who ministered to Seton Hall University sports teams says he was removed from his post for publicly supporting the “NOH8″ campaign supporting LGBT rights. The decision comes as the Catholic university’s men’s basketball team is recruiting Derrick Gordon, who is the first openly gay Division I men’s basketball player.

“I’ve been fired from SHU for posting a pic on FB supporting LGBT “NO H8,”‘ the Rev. Warren Hall tweeted Friday. He has since removed the tweet. “I’m sorry it was met with this response. I’ll miss my work here.” …

The majority of Catholic colleges were founded and continue to be administered by members of a religious order like Jesuits, Dominicans or Franciscans. But Seton Hall was founded and continues to be directly run by the Archdiocese of Newark, N.J.

“Seton Hall University does not comment on personnel matters,” Laurie A. Pine, a spokeswoman for Seton Hall, said in a statement. “The Archbishop of Newark appoints the Director of Campus Ministry, who serves at his discretion.”

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Fury after Catholic priest at Seton Hall University is fired…

NEW JERSEY
Daily Mail (UK)

Fury after Catholic priest at Seton Hall University is fired from his alma mater for publicly supporting gay marriage online

A Catholic priest was allegedly fired from Seton Hall University for posting a photo supporting same-sex marriage and other LGBT rights online, a decision that has sparked widespread outrage.

Rev. Warren Hall was appointed Director of Campus Ministry at his private alma mater in South Orange, New Jersey – which is directly run by the Archdiocese of Newark – around a year ago.

But on Friday, he told his Twitter followers: ‘I’ve been fired from SHU for posting a pic on FB supporting LGBT “NO H8”. I’m sorry it was met with this response. I’ll miss my work here.’ …

In response, the university emphasized that the Archbishop of Newark ‘appoints the Director of Campus Ministry’, not campus officials. It also told students: ‘We understand how you feel’.

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Bail set at $400,000 for Quincy man accused of blackmailing rabbi

QUINCY (MA)
The Patriot LedgerWUIC

Posted May. 17, 2015

QUINCY – A judge has set bail at $400,000 for a Quincy man accused of blackmailing a well-known Sharon rabbi for hundreds of thousands of dollars by threatening to expose what he claimed was a sexual relationship between the rabbi and a teenage boy.

Nicholas Zemeitus, of Willard Street, had been held without bail since his arraignment Tuesday in Norfolk Superior Court on charges stemming from the alleged extortion scheme. A judge set bail at a hearing Thursday.

In court documents unsealed Tuesday, prosecutors said that Zemeitus was living in Milton in 2011 when he first threatened to expose Rabbi Barry Starr if the rabbi didn’t pay him to keep quiet. Starr resigned last year from his position at Temple Israel of Sharon and faces charges of embezzlement and larceny from the synagogue and will be arraigned at a later date.

Police have said their investigation turned up no evidence of a sexual encounter between Starr and a child.

Prosecutors also named Alexa Anderson, 24, who was living with Zemeitus in Milton, as a co-defendant in the extortion scheme. Anderson was arraigned Thursday on larceny charges and released on her promise to return to court June 23.

Zemeitus faces seven charges of larceny over $250, two charges of receiving stolen property valued over $250, one charge of larceny under $250 and one charge of extortion. Ronald W. Rice, a defense attorney appointed to represent Zemeitus, said Tuesday that he would argue against the $400,000 bail that prosecutors were seeking.

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Former priest says charging Archbishop with concealing child sex abuse likely to lead to other charges against clergy

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Former Catholic priest and District Court judge Chris Geraghty says the charging of an Australian Archbishop over allegations he concealed child sex abuse in the 1970s is likely to lead to other charges against Catholic clergy embroiled in similar cases.

Archbishop Philip Wilson, who is on indefinite leave, has denied the allegations and said he will be defending them.

Mr Geraghty told Radio National’s Religion and Ethics Report that the charging of Wilson was a big blow to the Catholic Church.

“If Philip Wilson is getting charged, there will be others I would think going to be charged too and they’d be running for cover worrying what’s going to happen,” he said.

“He’s a very senior member of the clergy in Australia, he’s now going to be standing up in court, he’ll be addressed as the accused.”

The charge relates to Wilson’s time in the Hunter Valley in the 1970s when he was a junior priest.

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Child sex abuse inquiry: A time to stop the suicides

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

John Ferguson
Victoria Editor
Melbourne

Even when Gerald Ridsdale was a young man he had the habits of a sinful old bastard.

Almost from the moment he was ordained in 1961, the Catholic Church in Australia’s most vicious offender was up to no good.

With his ear to the local gossip — perhaps even in the confessional when parishioners across western Victoria’s vast plains purged their fears and regrets — Father Gerry would be poised, waiting anxiously for the information he needed.

Word of a broken home, a death in the family, financial troubles; any weakness would do.

With this knowledge, Ridsdale — 81 on Wednesday — would swoop on grieving families, pretending to be offering wise counsel and pastoral relief. Doing the Lord’s work.

All the while, he was quietly preying on the parish’s children.

The more fragile the child the better for Father Gerry.

He has been convicted of abusing 54 children, but it is quietly speculated that Ridsdale’s victims can be counted in their hundreds.

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Abuse and rape at hands of Catholic priest led to years of dysfunction and addiction

AUSTRALIA
The Age

May 18, 2015

Cameron Houston and Chris Vedelago

When former priest David Rapson was ordained in 1982, he received a white cord known as a cincture, which fastens clerical vestments but also signifies chastity and purity in the Roman Catholic Church.

Not one for symbolism, Rapson used his cincture to restrain 16-year-old Ben Monagle, before he viciously raped the vulnerable student in 1990.

Last week, the 61-year-old was jailed for at least nine years over the rape and sexual assault of six students, but did not express any remorse to his victims.

Despite a string of sexual assaults dating back to 1976, Rapson became vice-principal of a Catholic boarding school in Melbourne, where boys were routinely and ruthlessly abused by a group of priests and brothers from 1960 to 1990.

For legal reasons, neither the school nor the Catholic order can be named.

But Mr Monagle, 41, is determined to tell his tragic story of clerical abuse, which triggered more than 20 years of mental illness, drug abuse and crime. He is also considering legal action to sue the Catholic order, which until now has only paid for 14 counselling sessions.

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Child sexual abuse inquiry will be ‘stressful’, warns Catholic Bishop of Ballarat

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

PETER MICKELBUROUGH HERALD SUN MAY 17, 2015

THE Catholic Bishop of Ballarat has publicly apologised and warned this week’s public hearings into child sexual abuse in Ballarat would be painful and distressing.

“The hearings will be very stressful for survivors and their families and for people across our region,” Bishop Paul Bird said in a letter to local parishes.

“People will be deeply upset by the accounts of crimes against children and by the failings of church leaders in responding to these crimes.

“I encourage you to support one another through these difficult days.”

Ballarat has been home to some of the Catholic Church’s most notorious paedophiles, including priest Gerald Ridsdale, who has been in jail since 1994 over 195 child rapes and sex attacks against 54 victims as young as four, and Robert Charles Best, a Christian Brother, jailed in 2011 and guilty to more than 40 offences against dozens of students, some as young as eight.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse will begin its Ballarat hearings on Tuesday. They are expected to continue for up to three weeks.

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Case Study 28, May 2015, Ballarat

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

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

Please note that the audio on the webcast may be frequently cut to protect the identity of people who have been granted a pseudonym in this hearing.

Live streaming times
The public hearing will be streamed live via this website between 10am and 4pm (AEST).

Join us on Twitter and Facebook for regular updates.

Please be aware that the content of the public hearings can be distressing for viewers. Visit support services to find services near you, or for immediate support call the Royal Commission on 1800 099 340 or Lifeline on 13 11 14.

Location
Ballarat Magistrates Court, 100 Grenville St South Ballarat VIC 3350, Ballarat

The scope and purpose of the public hearing is to inquire into:
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.

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Indiana minister faces Kentucky child sex abuse charges

INDIANA
Chicago Tribune

A Southeastern Indiana minister faces child sexual abuse charges in Kentucky for allegedly molesting a child several times, including inside the church where he previously preached.

A grand jury in Lewis County, Kentucky, recently indicted 63-year-old Duncan D. Aker Jr. on sexual abuse and sodomy charges involving a victim under 12 years of age. He was arrested May 3 by Greensburg, Indiana, police on a Kentucky warrant.

Kentucky State Police spokesman Joe Veeneman says Akers was minister at the Vanceburg Christian Church at the time of the alleged abuse.

Akers was most recently a Greensburg Christian Church minister.

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Hundreds attend picnic to support archbishop

CALIFORNIA
SF Gate

By Victoria Colliver Saturday, May 16, 2015

San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone smiled for photos, blessed the faithful and accepted thanks from many among the hundreds of Bay Area Catholics who showed up for a picnic Saturday in San Francisco in support of the religious leader.

For months, the archbishop has been the target of demonstrations by teachers, students, parents and others who disagreed with changes he has proposed for the staff handbook and high school employee contracts at Riordan and Sacred Heart Cathedral high schools in San Francisco, Marin Catholic in Kentfield and Junipero Serra in San Mateo that defined adultery, masturbation, homosexual relations and the viewing of pornography as “gravely evil.”

“He’s like a rock star,” said Eva Muntean of San Francisco, who organized Saturday’s “family picnic day” at Sue Bierman Park near the Ferry Building in support of the archbishop, as she watched Cordileone try to inch his way through the throng of well-wishers.

Muntean, who started the website sfcatholics.org, said she organized the event because she believes many Bay Area Catholics feel their support of the archbishop isn’t being heard.

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Child abuse survivors rage at inquiry delay

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sunday Times

Tom Harper, Home Affairs Correspondent

THE invitation to meet Whitehall officials last month to discuss the Goddard inquiry prompted nervousness among the group of child abuse survivors.

One of them, Andrew Lavery, was so mistrustful about the motive for the briefing, held in a red-brick Westminster house near the Houses of Parliament — which are alleged to have hosted several paedophiles protected by the police and security services — that he decided to record it secretly.

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4 teens charged in St. Francis de Sales sex assault investigation

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Jeremy Gorner and Gregory Pratt
Chicago Tribune

Four teenagers have been charged in connection with a sexual assault investigation involving the baseball team at St. Francis de Sales High School in Chicago, the Tribune has learned.

St. Francis de Sales officials announced in April that they were suspending 12 students over a March incident in a school locker room, which they characterized as “bullying.” Five students were suspended five days for allegedly participating and seven others for two days for witnessing it and not reporting it, according to the school at the time.

Police said at the time that they were investigating the incident as a sexual assault.

Four juveniles were held at the Calumet District police station earlier Saturday and have since been released to their parents. Sally Daly, a spokeswoman for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, confirmed that four boys had been charged as juveniles by police but couldn’t confirm what the charges were.

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Royal commission ‘in vain’ without government redress for victims: advocate

AUSTRALIA
WA Today

May 17, 2015

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

Australia’s peak advocate for children raised in orphanages and foster homes has urged the Federal Government to rethink its rejection of a national support scheme for survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

Care Leavers Australia Network (CLAN) has written to Prime Minister Tony Abbott, asking the Commonwealth to help fund a redress scheme so victims are not forced to turn to the institutions where they were abused.

Executive officer of CLAN, Leonie Sheedy, argues adults who were abused as children in publicly funded institutions should receive Government-supported redress.

The Federal Government opposes the idea of a national redress scheme saying it would be too expensive and time consuming to implement.

“You are choosing to say the Federal Government will not manage or contribute to a national redress scheme so desperately needed by so many people,” Ms Sheedy wrote.

“You are choosing to say the responsibility for any redress scheme lies solely with the institutions in which we suffered.

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Fury as Home Office officials claim Establishment sex abuse inquiry could last for EIGHT years

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By MATT CHORLEY, POLITICAL EDITOR FOR MAILONLINE

The inquiry into Establishment child abuse could last up to eight years, twice as long as first thought, it was claimed today.

The controversial probe into allegations of decades of abuse and cover-up has been dogged by delays, with two chairmen force to resign, and might not even start for another six months.

But abuse survivors condemned the suggestion it might not finish until 2023, warning: ‘Justice delayed is justice denied.’

The inquiry, which has been a shambles since it was announced last July, will investigate whether public bodies, including governments, charities, the Church and BBC, failed to protect children.

Home Secretary Theresa May was forced to scour the globe to find a chairman for the inquiry, after fears leading figures in the UK would be seen as too close to the Establishment.

Lowell Goddard, a High Court judge in New Zealand, was appointed in February when she said leading the inquiry was the ‘biggest challenge’ she has ever faced.

She told the Home Affairs Select Committee she was reluctant to set a timescale for the inquiry as this stage.

But she said it had been indicated when she took the job that it could take ‘three years, possibly into a fourth’.

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Christian minister charged with forcing young boy to have sex with him repeatedly over a 3-year period

INDIANA
The Raw Story

JIN ZHAO
16 MAY 2015

A pastor in southern Indiana is charged with child sexual abuse in Kentucky for molesting a child several times over a 3-year period in his car, home and inside the church where he preached, AP reports.

A grand jury in Lewis County, Kentucky, recently indicted 63-year-old Duncan D. Aker Jr., a Greensburg Christian Church minister, on sexual abuse and sodomy charges involving a victim under 12 years of age.

Akers was the pastor at the Vanceburg Christian Church in Kentucky at the time of the alleged abuse, according to Kentucky State Police spokesman Joe Veeneman. Greensburg, Indiana police arrested him on May 3 on a warrant from Vanceburg and later extradited him to Kentucky.

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May 16, 2015

Abuse victims ‘will not be pleased’ with VIP paedophile inquiry says its former chief

UNTIED KINGDOM
Mirror

16 MAY 2015

BY KEIR MUDIE

Baroness Elizabeth Butler-Sloss was forced to step down as head of the high-profile investigation and admits that many victims ‘will not be heard’

The inquiry into historic child abuse by VIPs is flawed and victims will be denied justice, according to a former head of the probe.

Baroness Elizabeth Butler-Sloss quit the investigation in July 2014 after it emerged her brother Sir Michael Havers was Attorney General at the time of some of the worst alleged abuse in the 1980s.

But giving a public talk in the run-up to the election, the 81-year-old was recorded saying she believed the inquiry was doomed to failure.

Outspoken Lady Butler-Sloss – best-known for leading the inquest into Princess Diana’s death – also branded SNP chief Nicola Sturgeon a “fishwife” and Alex Salmond “arrogant”.

A recording of her remarks at the Chatpolitics event in London, handed to the Sunday People, confirmed that the Baroness does not believe the victims of the abuse will find closure in the investigation.

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Students react over twitter to priest’s dismissal by Archdiocese

NEW YORK
The Setonian

Posted By Emily Balan on May 16, 2015

Students took to social media to express their concerns in light of news Friday that the director for the Office of Campus Ministry, the Rev. Warren Hall, had allegedly been fired from the University.

Hall announced in a tweet around 2 p.m. that he had been let go from the University “for posting a pic on (Facebook) supporting LGBT ‘NO H8.’ I’m sorry it was met with this response. I’ll miss my work here.”
Since then, a spokesman for the Archdiocese confirmed Hall’s termination.

The initial post, which has since been deleted, was met with a large reaction from the social media community, racking up over 230 retweets and 150 favorites.

There are some who believe this will reflect poorly on the University, that a priest was allegedly fired for publicly supporting anti-discrimination for LGBT people by posting a ‘NOH8’ poster on Facebook.

Student Danielle Andreani, @dcandreani, tweeted at Seton Hall, “Would you like to comment? This seems unfair. College is where students & professors can engage in meaningful topics.” SHU’s official twitter replied, “We are thankful for all the tweets. The Archdiocese of Newark appoints the director of Campus ministry at Seton Hall,” to which Andreanu replied, “And you don’t even feel bad about the shameful situation that is occurring? This looks bad for #SHU, not the Archdiocese.”

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Seton Hall Priest Claims He Was Fired for Pro-LGBT Post

NEW YORK
NBC New York

A priest says he was fired as director of Seton Hall University’s campus ministry because of a pro-LGBT Facebook post.

Rev. Warren Hall took to Twitter Friday saying “I’ve been fired from SHU for posting a pic on FB supporting LGBT ‘NO H8.’ I’m sorry it was met with this response. I’ll miss my work here.”

A petition started by students demanding Hall’s reinstatement has since received over 600 signatures.

“Father Hall is a well-loved member of the Seton Hall community, and much of the student body is shocked and saddened by this decision,” said student Ethan Kraft.

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Media Release – May 16, 2015

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

Two childhood victims of clergy sexual abuse from the 1980s, Juan Rodriguez and Luis Ramos, will discuss horrific sexual abuse by Fr. Kenneth Wicks at St. Gabriel’s Roman Catholic Church in East New York, Brooklyn, and at Fr. Wicks’ vacation home in upstate New York where Fr. Kenneth Wicks allegedly killed himself.

Juan Rodriguez and Luis Ramos reported the sexual abuse by Fr. Kenneth Wicks to the Diocese of Brooklyn, New York in approximately 1993-1995 but the Diocese of Brooklyn did nothing to help the childhood victims of clergy sexual abuse and kept the sexual abuse quiet.

It is believed that dozens of children were sexually abused by Fr. Kenneth Wicks at St. Gabriel’s Parish in East New York, Brooklyn, and in Fr. Wicks’ upstate New York vacation home and the abuse allegedly included tying up and blindfolding children during the acts of sexual abuse.

What
A demonstration, leafleting, and press conference alerting the media and general public of horrific and extensive sexual abuse of minor children at St. Gabriel’s Roman Catholic Church in East New York, Brooklyn, and other places by Fr. Kenneth Wicks.

When
Sunday, May 17, 2015 from 9:00 am until 1:00 pm (Press conference at Noon)

Where
On the public sidewalk outside St. Gabriel’s Roman Catholic Church, 749 Linwood Street, Brooklyn, New York 11208 – 718-257-0612

Who
Juan Rodriguez, a community activist and leader of the 75th Police Precinct Community Board, and childhood sexual abuse victim of Fr. Kenneth Wicks; Luis Ramos, a social worker in New York City, former priest seminarian and Franciscan friar, indigenous activist, and childhood victim of Fr. Kenneth Wicks; Robert M. Hoatson, Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, and members of Road to Recovery, Inc.; and, family members and supporters of Juan Rodriguez and Luis Ramos

Why
In the 1980s, Juan Rodriguez and Luis Ramos as minor children were sexually abused by Fr. Kenneth Wicks at St. Gabriel’s Parish in East New York, Brooklyn, and other places. The two clergy sexual abuse victims reported the sexual abuse to a leader of the Diocese of Brooklyn in the 1990s but nothing was done to help the victims heal and compensate the victims for their injuries. In fact, Juan Rodriguez was told that Fr. Kenneth Wicks suffered a fatal heart attack or stroke after being confronted with his allegations when, in fact, Fr. Kenneth Wicks reportedly killed himself in his vacation home in upstate New York. Demonstrators will urge other victims of Fr. Kenneth Wicks to come forward to begin their healing and demand of the Diocese of Brooklyn that it compensate sexual abuse victims.

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

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Helping the children of the Hibbing Catholic community

MINNESOTA
Hibbing Daily Tribune

Posted: Sunday, May 10, 2015

by Dr. Chad Scott
Columnist

The sexual misconduct by a member of the clergy may cause the children associated with this community to go through a period of readjustment. What we do as adults can significantly help the children during this difficult time.

Without support, children often experience varying levels of avoidance and denial, which can prevent the utilization of healthy coping strategies. In some cases this can lead to mental and physical difficulties that can impact a variety of areas in a child’s life.

Providing meaningful information to children in language that they can easily understand is crucial. Let them know that the vast majority of clergy, teachers and others in positions of authority are trustworthy, and that schools and churches are overwhelmingly safe places. They also need to understand that a small number of people in positions of authority do inappropriate things to children, and that it is important to let a parent or guardian know if he or she ever experiences such an incident.

There are a multitude of reactions that a child may have in the aftermath of a traumatic event. Some of the more common reactions include sleep problems, feeling sad or worried, guilt feelings, anger and aggression, feeling sick, being preoccupied with the event, social withdrawal and concentration problems to name just a few. Another frequently seen reaction that is more common in younger children is developmental regression, such as increased clinging, crying or soiling their clothes.
Telling a child that the way they are reacting is normal allows them to feel normal in an otherwise abnormal situation with a few exceptions.

Not all children will be able to cope effectively and that their reactions to the event may need to be evaluated by a professional. These include any behavior or emotional state that significantly interferes with daily functioning. Professional interventions need to be sought out immediately if thoughts of suicide or self-injurious behaviors, such as cutting oneself, are found to be present.

The local crisis hotline can be contacted 24-hours per day by calling 1-800-450-2273. Contact 911 immediately if a child ever appears to be in imminent danger of suicide. Never leave a suicidal person alone without first consulting a mental health professional.

In talking with their child or observing their behavior, a parent may become suspicious that their child may be a victim of sexual abuse. No one symptom or behavior universally signals sexual abuse. A consultation with a mental health professional is recommended if there are any extreme changes in a child’s behavior, such as significant regression in development, hypersexuality or significantly withdrawing from others.

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Offering some caution

MINNESOTA
Hibbing Daily Tribune

Posted: Friday, May 15, 2015

Editor’s Note: This is in response to Dr. Chad Scott’s column “Helping the children of the Hibbing Catholic community” published on this page on May 10.

First, I agree with nearly everything Dr. Chad Scott said, and I won’t question his expertise.

However, in his second paragraph, he recommends that parents tell children that the vast majority of clergy and churches are safe places. Clearly, they are not, and given the global scope of the criminal sexual deviancy of priests, parents need to instill a fear of these people.

I cannot envision a scenario where it is necessary for any clergy to be alone with any child at any time. If they seek time alone with a child, we should deny such opportunity and report it to authorities.
The website “bishopaccountability.org” will demonstrate that nearly every Catholic diocese in the United States has had credible allegations of criminal sexual misconduct by priests or nuns.

After the Catholic church’s own involvement in this travesty became common knowledge, the Vatican attempted to blame the problem on homosexuality among priests. That was a flat out lie because they knew the problem was pedophilia and ephebophilia among priests.

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As Le Moyne prepares for Dolan speech, leader of abuse survivors group says: Remember us

NEW YORK
Syracuse.com

By Sean Kirst | skirst@syracuse.com
on May 16, 2015

Almost a year ago, Charlie Bailey’s dentist said to him: You look a little gray. The worried dentist said Bailey should see a cardiologist. Bailey had already gone through all the standard tests, including a stress test and an echocardiogram. Everything about his heart seemed to be fine.

Yet he took the dentist’s advice, and Bailey’s cardiologist had the same worried gut reaction. The doctor ordered an angiogram, which showed Bailey had been walking around with several blockages. “A widow-maker,” Bailey said of the condition of his heart, and he had surgery last year that he’s sure saved his life.

He describes himself as a spiritual guy, although he no longer feels the need for any established church, and he feels as if he’s still here for a mission:

Bailey, 64, will continue speaking out on the trauma he endured as a child, and that means expressing his disbelief at the choice of Cardinal Timothy Dolan, one of the nation’s most influential Catholics, as Sunday’s commencement speaker at Le Moyne College, a Jesuit school.

“I don’t understand it,” Bailey said. “I’m so mad, just infuriated, that he was even considered.”

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Recommending Laura Bassett’s Haunting Article…

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Recommending Laura Bassett’s Haunting Article “Buried in Baltimore: The Mysterious Murder of a Nun Who Knew Too Much”

If you have not read Laura Bassett’s Huffington Post article “Buried in Baltimore: The Mysterious Murder of a Nun Who Knew Too Much,” I highly encourage you to do so. It’s not easy reading, and you may not be able to shake the essay, having read it.

But necessary reading for those trying to wrap their minds around the abuse situation in the Catholic church, to come to terms with the depths of corruption from which the abuse and its cover-up emanate, and to understand why it was that, for such a very long time, Catholic institutions implicated in abuse were able to evade the law and media coverage.

Bassett tells the story of the never-solved murder of Sister Catherine Cesnik of Baltimore in 1969, and the intersecting story of Father Joseph Maskell, chaplain of the all-girls school, Archbishop Keough, at which Cesnik taught. An excerpt:

Former Keough students said Maskell used his charm, psychology training and moral authority to first disarm the young girls, then to manipulate them into sexual relationships. He targeted struggling or badly behaved students — [Gemma] Hoskins and [Abbie] Schaub, who got straight As, said he never bothered them — asking the girls if they were having problems at home, or if they had been sexually active with their boyfriends or used drugs. Sometimes the priest used repetitive phrases — “I only want what’s best for you, just what’s best for you,” one woman recalled him saying — to coax them into talking.

And:

The women [who have alleged as adults that Maskell raped them at Archbishop Keough] recall that Maskell had a gynecologist friend, Dr. Richter, who would examine them to make sure they weren’t pregnant. [Teresa] Lancaster claims Maskell took her to see Richter for a pregnancy test and then raped her on the table while Richter performed a breast exam.

And then Sister Cathy began to ask questions of some of the girls in the school about whether Maskell and his colleague Father Neil Magnus (the two masturbated in front of student Jean Wehner in “spiritual healing” sessions they conducted together, she alleges) were harming them. And not long after she began to ask those questions, her body was found at a dump site outside Baltimore with choke marks around her neck and a hole in the back of her skull where she had been hit with a blunt object.

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‘For the Loyal’

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

05/15/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

Over the past few weeks, I have been interacting with the cast and crew of the Illusion Theater’s production of Lee Blessing’s ‘For the Loyal’. The script is loosely based on the Jerry Sandusky scandal at Penn State, with the chief protagonist being Mia, the wife of an assistant football coach who thinks he has seen his boss engage in sexual abuse of a minor. The story attempts to present the different options and moral choices that Mia faces as she grapples with an appropriate response to what her husband has seen. The title of the play comes from a line in the college’s fight song, the implication being that ‘loyalty’ to the football program is the value that will be most richly rewarded.

While the theater contacted me because of obvious similarities between the script and recent events in my life, I should say at the outset that Mia’s choices are not my choices. I don’t find Mia particularly sympathetic. But, the concept of loyalty that is offered within the script did resonate with me, perhaps because the concept of loyalty, especially in the context of institutional loyalty and whistleblowing, is one that is so often debated.

You may or may not be surprised to learn that it was the concept of loyalty that the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis attempted to invoke to ensure my silence after my resignation in April of 2013. Although Chancery officials, including the Archbishop, like to say that they were completely taken aback when MPR started to run its series in September of 2013, in fact they were aware of the extreme likelihood of such disclosures occurring even prior to my resignation. Consequently, as early as May 3, 2013- a mere three days after I resigned- I was receiving letters from Archdiocesan attorneys reminding me of my ‘canonical duty of loyalty to the Archbishop’.

In English, ‘loyalty’ is often equated with adherence, as in the faithful adherence to a leader or a cause. In Latin, loyalty is synonymous with ‘fidelis’, in the sense of fidelity. You will not find the term ‘loyalty’ in the English version of the Code of Canon Law, nor will you find ‘fidelis’ used to describe the posture of an individual towards a bishop. Clergy are bound to obedience to their bishop, and curial officials, as I was, are to fulfill their office faithfully (emittere de munere fideliter adimplendo), but fidelity as a concept is directed not towards individuals, but towards the ethos of the Church- doctrine, bearing witness to Christ, and the people of God. Even our Profession of Faith does not require a statement of loyalty to a particular bishop, but rather to magisterial teachings of the Roman Pontiff and College of Bishops.

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Finding where the bodies are buried

CANADA
StarPhoenix

BY DOUGLAS QUAN, NATIONAL POST MAY 15, 2015

Growing up, Katherine Nichols went past the Brandon Indian Residential School every day in her school bus, but she had no idea what it was. After the school was torn down in 2000, and her parents took her to see the ruins, all she knew was that it was a school for aboriginal children.

It wasn’t until she took a first-year Native Studies course at university that she learned about the residential school system – Canadian history’s “sad chapter.”

And so when choosing a topic for her master’s thesis at the University of Manitoba, the budding forensic anthropologist was drawn back to the Brandon school, which operated from 1895 to 1972. She wanted to see if she could unravel its darkest secrets – and document all the students who had died or gone missing and where they were buried.

The small cemetery just north of the school has a cairn listing 11 students, but Nichols had heard whispers in the community about unmarked graves, and how they weren’t well-kept. She was certain there were secrets to be revealed.

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Aker pleads not guilty to sexual abuse charges

KENTUCKY
The Ledger Independent

CHRISTY HOOTS christy.hoots@lee.net

VANCEBURG | A former Vanceburg pastor charged with sexual abuse pleaded not guilty in Lewis County Circuit Court Friday.

Duncan Aker, 63, of Greensburg, Ind., was charged with five counts of sexual abuse and four counts of sodomy earlier this month after a Lewis County jury handed down an indictment against him in April.

According to a representative with the Greensburg, Ind., Police Department, Aker was arrested on May 3, on a warrant from Vanceburg, and was extradited to Kentucky not long after, but no other information was available.

“The investigation into the incidents took about three to four months,” Kentucky State Police Master Trooper Joe Veeneman said. “Then we had to wait on the extradition from Indiana.”

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Archbishop: Time to ‘refocus on the basics’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic Philly

BY MATTHEW GAMBINO

For all the opportunity the World Meeting of Families presents to strengthen families and invigorate the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Archbishop Charles Chaput is looking forward to one thing in particular this September.

“I’m looking forward to it being over with,” he said during a wide-ranging recent interview (see the full transcript). “I say that jokingly but I mean it. It’s an extra responsibility that requires a whole lot of my time. I haven’t had a normal year yet as a bishop (of Philadelphia).”

Archbishop Chaput looked back over his past four years leading the Philadelphia Archdiocese during perhaps the most tumultuous period in its 200-year history, and ahead to the historic World Meeting of Families and the visit of Pope Francis to the city this September.

He recalled that his first year beginning in September 2011 was occupied with dealing with the fallout from the second Philadelphia grand jury report on sexual abuse of children by some priests. The following year saw the revelations of tens of millions in annual operating losses for the archdiocese’s central administration and hundreds of millions in underfunded obligations to pensions, insurance and other funds.

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St Bride’s parishioners unite in their call for return of Father Paul Morton

SCOTLAND
Scottish Daily Record

16 MAY 2015
BY KENNY SMITH

Parishioners at St Bride’s Parish Church are urging the Bishop of Motherwell to let Father Paul Morton return.

The Reformer has been inundated with messages of support for Fr Morton, after police ended their investigation into an allegation of an historic incident of sexual abuse without charge.

And they are united in their joy, as well as wanting the priest to return to St Bride’s, where he has been based since 2000.

Fr Morton has always been popular with his parishioners. After he previously took a sabbatical from St Bride’s, a petition was sent to the Bishop of Motherwell requesting Fr Morton return to St Bride’s.

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Le Moyne grads must protest in-campus to oust Cardinal Dolan & they must occupy Rector’s office like La Sapienza undergrads who ousted Benedict XVI as speaker

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

Le Moyne grads must take immediate drastic in-campus protest and do more than (a mild seemingly invisible online) Change.org petition to demand that Cardinal Dolan be disinvited as speaker to their commencement exercises. Their other plan – to close their eyes when Cardinal Dolan will be speaking at their graduation – is not a protest but a kowtow to the Vatican Mammon Evil Beast and its representative in New York.

Surely Le Moyne grads can do more or better than the undergraduate students of Rome’s La Sapienza University who were successful in ousting Pope Benedict XVI-RATzinger – a much bigger personage than Cardinal Dolan – as speaker to their convocation. In fact the pope is the biggest and highest person in the Catholic Church, therefore, Cardinal Dolan should be a small fish or a small piece of cake to handle.

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May 15, 2015

The Terrible Impact …

UNITED STATES
Failed Messiah

The Terrible Impact Of Rabbi Barry Freundel’s Mikvah Voyeurism In The Words Of One Of His Victims

Shmarya Rosenberg • FailedMessiah.com

Emma Shulevitz, one of the victims of mikvah voyeur Rabbi Barry Freundel’s, told the court today in her victim’s impact statement that Freundel had destroyed her life.

She said her father passed away in 2008 and the day after her father’s yartzeit, Freundel – who had become a sort of replacement father figure for her – called her and asked her if she wanted to take a practice dunk in the mikvah (ritual bath).

For Shulevitz, that practice ritual immersion was cathartic – until she found out last year that Freundel was secretly video-recording the women using the mikvah as they were naked and preparing to immerse.

“To me, the practice dunk was a true immersion to cleanse myself of 25 years of not doing mitzvos, of touching a dead body, of my sexual exploits in my early 20s. Now I am 30 and have to reevaluate everything in my life.…I have suffered for speaking out to the media and have lost my community. I need therapy for that. Barry destroyed my life.…What I thought was a cleansing experience was a sick betrayal of trust. I am wrecked emotionally, psychologically, sexually. All of the beliefs I had are out the window because of the hypocrisy I witnessed,” Shulevitz said.

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Woman rallies over alleged abuse of husband

NEW YORK
News 12

[with video]

THE BRONX – An advocate for women allegedly sexually abused by Bill Cosby is letting her voice be heard right in the Bronx on a slightly different matter.

Helen Gumpel was an actress on “The Cosby Show,” and she claims that Cosby tried to lure her into a dressing room to perform sexual acts.

She appeared in the Bronx Friday to draw attention to the alleged sexual abuse of her husband. Grumpel says a deceased Jesuit priest and professor at Fordham University abused him when he was a minor.

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S.F. Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone’s supporters should back off

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

By C.W. Nevius
May 15, 2015

Supporters of San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone are holding a “family picnic” Saturday at Sue Bierman Park. To which much of the city replies: Hey guys, why don’t you give it a rest?

As Cordileone’s most eloquent critic, Brian Cahill, the former head of San Francisco Catholic Charities, says, when Cordileone arrived here 2 1/2 years ago, he had “barely unpacked his bags” before he began launching volleys from the ultraconservative faction of the culture wars.

He ignored protests from prominent local politicians such as Rep. Nancy Pelosi and Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom and attended the divisive March for Marriage in Washington, D.C., in 2014. More recently, he announced changes to the teacher handbook for archdiocese schools that required teachers to “affirm and believe” that “adultery, masturbation, fornication, the viewing of pornography and homosexual relations are gravely evil.”

And his hand-picked pastor for Star of the Sea parish, the Rev. Joseph Illo, courted controversy by announcing that girls would no longer be allowed to serve as altar servers, and followed that up with some blog posts that said if parishioners left because of his policies, it was “a necessary purging.”

And how has that worked out? Well, when this year’s March for Marriage rolled around, it turned out Cordileone had other pressing matters to attend to and took a pass. The teacher handbook hasn’t been changed, and now the San Francisco Archdiocesan Federation of Teachers (with connections to the AFL-CIO) is involved, so this has turned into a labor relations matter, which — just a piece of advice — may get messy.

As Paul Hance, a teacher at Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo and American Federation of Teachers Local 2240 union representative says, “We will not surrender our employment rights that are protected by state and federal law.”

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Controversial priest ordered to quit his house after losing legal battle

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Saturday 16 May 2015

A PRIEST at the centre of a bitter row with the Catholic Church has been ordered to leave his parish house.

Father Matthew Despard, 50, is involved in a dispute over a book he wrote alleging a gay mafia was operating at the top of the Church.

He was ordered to leave his home at St John Ogilvie in High Blantyre, Lanarkshire, but refused, disobeying the wishes of the Bishop of Motherwell, Joseph Toal.

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 sex abuse free on bond

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

A Hibbing priest accused of inappropriately touching three girls has been released from jail on bond.

Court records indicate that the Rev. Brian Michael Lederer was released from the St. Louis County Jail on Thursday after posting bond. He had been held on $250,000 bail since his arrest last week.

Lederer is facing five felony criminal sexual conduct charges, the most serious of which carries up to 25 years in prison. He is accused of inappropriately touching three girls — all under the age of 16 — in incidents starting last year and continuing through last week.

A judge previously denied Lederer’s request for pretrial supervised release. He is due back in court on June 4.

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.