ABUSE TRACKER

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

June 4, 2015

Protesters get relief from Friday deadline to leave church

MASSACHUSETTS
The Sun Chronicle

SCITUATE – Protesters occupying a closed church say they’ll continue their nearly 11-year vigil after being granted another court reprieve.

The Friends of St. Frances X. Cabrini said late Wednesday that a single justice of the Massachusetts Appeals Court stayed a lower court ruling that would have forced the group to vacate the Scituate church by Friday at 5 p.m.

The group says its Appeals Court hearing is scheduled for June 10 at 11 a.m.

The group says it remains hopeful for “open and constructive dialogue” with the Boston Archdiocese, which took them to court in order to end the protest. The archdiocese has declined to comment on the ongoing legal case.

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.

Royal Commission findings slam St Ann’s …

AUSTRALIA
Perth Now

Royal Commission findings slam St Ann’s Special School, police and church over notorious bus driver paedophile Brian Perkins

THE child-abuse royal commission has released damning findings into the response of the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide and SA Police over the handing of horrific child sexual abuse at St Ann’s Special School.

The findings, released today, found the school, police and church had failed to protect the school’s intellectually disabled children, many of whom were abused by notorious bus driver paedophile Brian Perkins.

Perkins was employed as a bus driver at the school in 1986 driving children with intellectual disabilities to and from school daily while unsupervised.

The Royal Commission report found:

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.

Royal Commission releases damning report

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Source: AAP
4 JUN 2015

The sex abuse royal commission has detailed a litany of failures against a south Australian school, the police and the church over their handling of sexual abuse of disabled children.

In March last year the inquiry investigated Adelaide’s St Ann’s Special School and its bus driver, Brian Perkins, who sexually abused intellectually disabled children between 1986 and 1991.

A report by the commission into the case says police failed to issue a warrant for Perkins’ arrest in 1991, despite having information about three prior convictions, the nature of sexual allegations against him and the risk he posed of further sexual offences against children.

Despite police seizing child pornography from Perkins’ in 1993, the photos were not examined.

“The photographs strengthened the case against Mr Perkins in relation to (one victim) and revealed another offence against (another victim), a former St Ann’s student who had been in the care of Mr Perkins,” the report said.

“The failure by SAPOL to fully investigate material seized from Mr Perkins in 1993 contributed to the years of delay in bringing Mr Perkins to trial.”

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

Scituate parishioners granted reprieve in church vigil

MASSACHUSETTS
WHDH

SCITUATE, Mass. (WHDH) – Parishioners of a Scituate church who have kept a constant vigil for the past 11 years have been granted another temporary reprieve.

A court order would have forced them to leave the property by Friday afternoon.

A hearing is now set for next Wednesday.

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.

SPECIAL INVESTIGATION: Centre and laundry ‘one and the same’

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

Thursday, June 04, 2015

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

Evidence that An Grianán training centre and High Park Magdalene Laundry were “one and the same thing” was uncovered by the HSE in 2012 — yet An Grianán was excluded from the Magdalene redress scheme.

The revelation is contained in a memo sent from the then assistant director of the Children and Family Services, Phil Garland, to the Department of Children and Youth Affairs representative on the McAleese committee, Denis O’Sullivan, and the national director of the Children and Family Services at the HSE, Gordon Jeyes, on June 26, 2012, while the HSE was examining the laundries issue as part of the McAleese inquiry.

Mr Garland points out that the HSE had uncovered evidence that showed “quite categorically” that An Grianán and High Park Magdalene Laundry, which were on the same site in Donnybrook in Dublin, were “one and the same thing”.

He said evidence “describes the functions of the laundry and the training centres and states quite categorically that all of the girls underwent some degree of training in the laundries, in addition to other tasks of ‘housewifery’, that is cookery classes and domestic science”.

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.

West Texas youth pastor gets 90 days in jail for 9 counts of sexual assault of a child

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

BY JOSHUA FECHTER : JUNE 3, 2015

A former youth pastor at Second Baptist Church in Odessa pleaded guilty Tuesday to having sexual relations with an underage girl in 2009.

Under a plea deal, Robert John Weber pleaded guilty to nine counts of sexual assault of a child, a second-degree felony that carries a possible maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, and will serve 90 days in jail and 10 years deferred adjudication, Ector County District Attorney Bobby Bland said in a phone interview Wednesday.

Weber also may not serve as a pastor or be near children that aren’t his own without supervision or permission from the child’s parents or guardians, Bland 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.

Jessa Duggar: “I Was One of the Victims,” But Don’t Call Josh a Child Molester

UNITED STATES
Us

BY RACHEL MCRADY

Speaking out. Fox News has revealed that both Jill and Jessa Duggar will appear on their parents’ interview with Megyn Kelly on Fox News Channel’s The Kelly File, speaking as molestation victims of their older brother Josh Duggar.

During part of the interview obtained by Us Weekly, the now-pregnant Jessa reflected on her brother’s actions when he was a teen, calling them “very wrong.”

But that didn’t stop Jessa, 22, from defending Josh against those who have spoken out against him.

“I do want to speak up in his defense against people who are calling him a child molester or a pedophile or a rapist, some people are saying,” Jessa told Kelly. “I’m like, ‘That is so overboard and a lie really.’ I mean people get mad at me for saying that, but I can say this because I was one of the victims.”

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

Duggar parents say son accused of sexual abuse fondled his four sisters

UNITED STATES
Chicago Tribune

By Tribune wire reports

Reality TV star Jessa Duggar told Fox News Channel on Wednesday that she was a victim of her older brother Josh Duggar, who fondled five girls when he was a teenager.

Jessa Duggar, featured like her brother in the family’s TLC series, “19 Kids and Counting,” told Fox in an interview conducted in Arkansas on Wednesday that she wanted to defend him. She said allegations he’s a child molester or pedophile are “so overboard and a lie,” Fox reported.

The Associated Press generally does not identify victims of sexual mistreatment. But Jessa Duggar is speaking publicly, in an interview that Fox’s Megyn Kelly also conducted with her parents, Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar. While Fox distributed Jessa Duggar’s quote Wednesday, it didn’t show it during the one-hour special about the case, with Kelly instead saying Fox would air the interviews with Jessa Duggar and her sister Jill Duggar on Friday.

The Duggar parents said Josh Duggar, who’s now 27, fondled four of his sisters and a family baby sitter when he was a teenager and confessed to them. The fondling was done over the girls’ clothes and, except in two cases, happened when the girls were asleep, Jim Bob Duggar 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.

Vatican’s No. 3 Fights Allegations in Australian Abuse Probe

AUSTRALIA/VATICAN CITY
ABC News (US)

SYDNEY — Jun 4, 2015
By KRISTEN GELINEAU and NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press

Cardinal George Pell has been dogged for years by allegations that he mishandled the Catholic Church sex abuse crisis in his native Australia, and now the scrutiny is more intense than ever. Australia’s latest inquiry is as high-level as it gets, and since Pell is now the Vatican’s third-most-powerful official, the same can nearly be said for him.

Pell, whom Pope Francis placed in charge of the Vatican’s finances last year, is accused of creating a victims’ compensation program mainly to protect the church’s assets and of using aggressive tactics to discourage victims’ lawsuits, all while he was a bishop in Australia.

Pell is also facing accusations from earlier in his career when he was a priest and auxiliary bishop and not in the ultimate position of authority: that he ignored warnings about an abusive teacher, bribed the victim of a pedophile priest to stay silent and was part of a committee that moved that priest from parish to parish.

Pell has repeatedly denied wrongdoing and defended his record on confronting the abuse scandal as archbishop of Melbourne, and later of Sydney. But the investigation by Australia’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is raising eyebrows in the Vatican, where the pope promised to hold bishops accountable for failing to protect children and care for victims.

The Vatican’s position was further complicated this week when Peter Saunders, a member of Pope Francis’ sexual abuse advisory commission, spoke out against Pell. The issue has now become so fraught that three Vatican offices have issued statements trying to limit the damage by distancing themselves from Saunders’ comments and, to some degree, what is happening Down Under.

Pell testified twice last year before the long-running Royal Commission — the highest form of investigation in Australia — and with pressure mounting, he offered to appear again. On Monday, the commission took him up on that, asking him to testify at a later date.

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

Trial to begin Monday for man accused of sexually abusing boys

CALIFORNIA
Daily Pilot

By Jeremiah Dobruck
June 3, 2015

The trial for a former church volunteer accused of sexually abusing young boys will begin Monday with jury selection, an Orange County prosecutor said Wednesday.

It was unclear until this week whether the trial would be delayed while the district attorney’s office worked out getting a witness who lives out of the country to the courtroom.

Officials have secured a visa for the man and can move forward, prosecutor Heather Brown said.

The witness is one of seven people whom officials allege Christopher McKenzie, 48, sexually assaulted over more than a decade.

McKenzie is facing 24 felony charges related to child pornography and sexual abuse of minors, according to court records. He has pleaded not guilty to all 24 counts.

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 backed by Catholic archbishops as ‘man of integrity’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

June 4, 2015

Steve Lillebuen

Australia’s most senior Catholic clergy have been criticised for endorsing Cardinal George Pell’s handling of child sex abuse cases during the middle of the royal commission.

Seven bishops and archbishops have signed a statement backing Cardinal Pell, saying he was one of the first bishops in the world to set up a response to abuse in the church.

“He is a man of integrity who is committed to the truth and to helping others, particularly those who have been hurt or who are struggling,” said the statement, signed by two NSW bishops and five
“His style can be robust and direct; he does not wear his heart on his sleeve. But underneath he has a big heart for people.”

But Nicky Davis, from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said the statement is offensive and yet another example of the church trying to protect its reputation above all other considerations.

She said clergy abuse survivors deserve far more respect from senior church leaders.

The clergy statement, which claims credit for helping survivors, may actually silence and undermine those who have been brave enough to testify, she said.

“If Australia’s bishops, including Cardinal Pell, are truly men of integrity, they would cease trying to silence survivors, and call for police to investigate every single case of clergy child sexual violation for any cover-up,” she said.

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

Royal Commission findings slam St Ann’s …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Royal Commission findings slam St Ann’s Special School, police and church over notorious bus driver paedophile Brian Perkins

POLICE REPORTER JORDANNA SCHRIEVER THE ADVERTISER JUNE 04, 2015

THE child-abuse royal commission has released damning findings into the response of the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide and SA Police over the handing of horrific child sexual abuse at St Ann’s Special School.

The findings, released today, found the school, police and church had failed to protect the school’s intellectually disabled children, many of whom were abused by notorious bus driver paedophile Brian Perkins.

Perkins was employed as a bus driver at the school in 1986 driving children with intellectual disabilities to and from school daily while unsupervised.

The Royal Commission report found:

THE school did not comply with its own policy requiring that volunteers be supervised by a registered teacher, which created further opportunities for Perkins to sexually abuse children in his care.

THE Catholic Education Office did not have a policy on respite care by employees or volunteers.

AFTER complaints were made about Perkins in 1991, police investigated and pornographic photographs of students who attended the school were found at his home. However it was not until 2003 that he was convicted of five sexual offences against three students at St Ann’s and sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment.

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.

CALL FOR CHURCHES TO BE INCLUDED IN SCOTTISH CHILD ABUSE INQUIRY

SCOTLAND
Care Appointments

The Churches Child Protection Advisory Service (CCPAS) has today called on the Scottish National Inquiry into Historic Child Abuse to include within its remit abuse which involved churches.

CCPAS say there is a growing chorus of concern, being voiced by many survivors of abuse, that churches are being “let off the hook” in this process. This is despite them being places where abuse is just as likely to have occurred as institutions that are covered by the Inquiry, such as residential care homes and independent boarding schools.

Simon Bass, CEO of CCPAS, commented: “This serious omission is all the more surprising when one considers that there is, taking place right now, another Inquiry into abuse within institutions where churches are most definitely having to give account of their actions. This is the Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which in this respect could quite easily serve as a model for Scotland.

“The Australian approach is highly relevant to the forthcoming Inquiry in Scotland, for it has since 2013 been hearing extensive evidence of incidents of abuse within institutions. These have included children’s homes and schools run by churches and other religious organisations. But it is also taking evidence of abuse perpetrated by members of the institutions of church denominations themselves – and how they have responded to those disclosures. Churches have therefore had to give evidence and explain why they acted as they did.

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.

Report of Case Study 9 released

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

4 June, 2015

The Royal Commission’s Report of Case Study no. 9 – the responses of the Catholic Archdiocese of Adelaide and the South Australian Police to allegations of child sexual abuse at St Ann’s Special School, was released today.

The report found that a lack of requirements surrounding police checks on employees enabled a man previously convicted for sexual offences to work as a bus driver at a special school in Adelaide. This man later went on to sexually abuse children with intellectual disabilities.

St Ann’s Special School was established in 1975 and catered for 50 to 60 students with intellectual disabilities aged between five and 20 years.

In 1986 Brian Perkins was employed by the school as a bus driver. He took children with intellectual and communication disabilities to and from school each day unsupervised. He also undertook volunteer work and provided respite care for students during his employment.

A public hearing into the matter which was held in Adelaide in March 2014, examined the circumstances surrounding Mr Perkins employment and the monitoring, supervision and oversight of his activities at the school.

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

St Ann’s Special School abuse: Royal commission finds school, Catholic Church, police failed abused children

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A number of failings by St Ann’s Special School, the police and Catholic Church have been found by an inquiry examining the sexual abuse of a number of intellectually disabled students.

About 30 students were sexually abused by bus driver Brian Perkins in the late 1980s and early ’90s.

But it was not until 2003 that he was convicted of abusing three children.

The abuse often went unreported because most of his victims could not speak.

Perkins took children with intellectual and communication disabilities to and from school each day unsupervised from 1986 to 1991.

He also undertook volunteer work and provided respite care for students during his employment.

The commission found a lack of requirements by the school and the Catholic Education Office surrounding police checks on employees enabled Perkins’ employment.

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.

Call off the Cardinal Pell witch-hunt

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank Brennan | 03 June 2015

Witch-hunts are not just a feature of the past. Justifiably, people are upset about the Catholic Church’s failures to deal with child sexual abuse.

On Monday, I was doing my best to answer questions upfront about all manner of things from Indigenous constitutional recognition to child abuse when ABC presenter Ian Henschke from Adelaide questioned my right to deliver the homily at the funeral mass for the ex-Keating Minister Bob Collins in Darwin Cathedral eight years ago. He said ‘a lot of people wonder at why you did that’.

He wanted to know if I had spoken to any of Collins’ victims. When Collins died, nothing was proved against him. No one then or since has ever approached me saying they were a victim of abuse by Collins. Henschke’s producer later defended the question as ‘appropriate within the context of the interview and the climate we find ourselves in’. The climate is one of witch-hunt.

I told Henschke’s listeners that Collins, like anyone, was entitled to Christian burial.

In my homily, I had said, ‘God alone is our judge, and God alone is Bob’s judge. This is not a day for judging Bob, his political opponents or his accusers. There have been plenty of splinters and logs in evidence these past days. Putting aside the splinters and logs, we come to the table of the Lord, all of us sinners and all of us praying, “Lord I am not worthy to receive you. Say but the word and I shall be healed.” We pray healing for all who have spoken for and against Bob these days.’

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Priest, Extradited from India, Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Girl

MINNESOTA
India West

ROSEAU, Minn. — Rev. Joseph Palanivel Jeyapaul, a Catholic priest from India, pleaded guilty May 22 to sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl while serving in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Crookston in northwestern Minnesota.

According to the Pioneer Press, the guilty plea comes nearly ten years after the incident occurred at his home in Greenbush, Minn.

Jeyapaul, 60, was extradited from India to the U.S. in November to face criminal charges brought in two different cases in Minnesota 9th District Court in Roseau, Minn., both alleging sexual abuse by Jeyapaul of underage female parishioners.

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Alarmsignalen misbruik boeddhisten werden genegeerd

NEDERLAND
NOS

Volgelingen van de Thaise monnik Mettavihari tonen zich geschokt over de omvang van het seksueel misbruik waaraan hun leraar zich schuldig heeft gemaakt. Ze zeggen overweldigd te zijn door het nieuws en de mate van het misbruik”.

Maar hoe verrassend kan het nieuws werkelijk voor hen zijn? Uit een reconstructie van de NOS blijkt dat kopstukken van het boeddhisme al begin jaren 80 over het misbruik werden geïnformeerd. Ook in een grote misbruikzaak in Middelburg werden prominente Nederlandse boeddhisten al in een vroeg stadium, in 2004, gewaarschuwd.

Rode draad in die twee zaken: de gewaarschuwde bestuurders en anderen bagatelliseerden het misbruik, keken weg en lieten afdoende maatregelen na, waardoor de verantwoordelijke monniken door konden gaan met het maken van slachtoffers.

1. Mettavihari (misbruik van 1974 tot tenminste 1992)

Eind 1980 of begin 1981 belt de politie de Buddharamatempel in Waalwijk. Bestuurslid Patrick Franssen neemt op. De politie vertelt hem dat er een melding is binnengekomen van seksueel misbruik van een minderjarige door hoofdmonnik Mettavihari.

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BUDDHIST MONK SEX ABUSE WARNINGS WERE IGNORED

NETHERLANDS
NL Times

Jun 4, 2015 by Janene Van Jaarsveldt

Buddhist authorities ignored the warnings they received in at least two cases of Buddhist monk sexual abuse, NOS reports based on a reconstruction of events.

According to the broadcaster, leaders of Buddhism were informed about the abuse committed by Thai monk Mettavihari in the early 80’s. And in the major abuse case in Middleburg, involving Gerhard Mattioli, prominent Dutch Buddhist were warned in 2004. In both cases the warned authorities and others downplayed the abuse, looked the other way and only implemented inadequate measures.

In late 1980 or early 1981 police officers visited the Buddhist temple in Waalwijk and spoke to board member Patrick Franssen. The police told him that they have received a report of sexual abuse of a minor committed by head monk Mettavihari. Franssen already had had bad experiences with Mettavihari in this area. In 1974 he had forced a 19 year old boy – at that time still legally underage – to have sex with him and, according to Franssen, it happened 40 to 50 more times in the two years that followed. Franssen decided that Mettavihari had to go and went to Chicago to report his behavior to a high priest, who in his words represented the Thai “Ministry of Religious Affairs”.

Franssen told NOS that this high priest immediately decided to replace Mettavihari with another head monk. In June 1981 Mettavihari was dismissed as president of the temple administration and replaced by Henk Barendregt. But to Franssen surprise, Barendregt allowed Mettavihari, who was his teacher, to return to the temple administration just a few months later. Barendregt was supported by Aad Verboom, president of the Foundation for Young Buddhists Netherlands, and a loyal supporter of Mettavihari. A fierce debate arose with Franssen insisting those attending the temple, Thai Dutch people, would not support a monk that is secretly not celibate and Brendregt insisting that this view is old-fashioned. According to Franssen, the fact that it involved involuntary sex with minors did not play a decisive role in the discussion. In 2015 Aad Verboom admitted that he did not believe Franssen story about the abuse and apologized for it.

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

June 3, 2015

Australian Archbishops write open letter…

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

SHANNON DEERY HERALD SUN JUNE 04, 2015

Australian Archbishops write open letter to support Cardinal George Pell, a ‘man of integrity’

AUSTRALIA’s most senior Catholics have thrown their support behind Cardinal George Pell amid calls for him to step aside from his post at the Vatican.

The Cardinal was this week formally asked by the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse to appear at a second round of hearings at Ballarat later this year.

It followed damning evidence during two weeks of hearings last month that alleged the Cardinal had been involved in a widespread cover-up of child sexual abuse in Ballarat in the 1970s and 1980s.

Cardinal Pell, who denies all allegations of wrongdoing, had offered to attend the hearings before the formal request was made.

Pressure has been mounting for the Cardinal to step down from his top post at the Vatican where as the Secretariat for the Economy he controls the church’s finances.

In an open letter published yesterday five archbishops and two bishops endorsed the Cardinal as a man of integrity.

The joint-statement was signed by the Archbishops of Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Hobart and Canberra-Goulbourn as well as Broken Bay bishop Peter Comensoli and Sydney’s auxiliary bishop.

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 backed by Catholic archbishops as ‘man of integrity’

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

June 4, 2015

Steve Lillebuen

Australia’s most senior Catholic clergy have endorsed George Pell’s handling of child sex abuse cases during the middle of a royal commission.

Seven Catholic bishops and archbishops have signed a statement backing Cardinal Pell, saying he was one of the first bishops in the world to set up a response to abuse in the church.

“He is a man of integrity who is committed to the truth and to helping others, particularly those who have been hurt or who are struggling,” said the statement, signed by two NSW bishops and five archbishops in Brisbane, Perth, Sydney, Hobart and Canberra-Goulburn.

“His style can be robust and direct; he does not wear his heart on his sleeve. But underneath he has a big heart for people.”

Cardinal Pell, who is now based at the Vatican, has been accused of trying to bribe a survivor to keep quiet and ignore the child abuse reports of another during Ballarat hearings of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

He has repeatedly denied the claims and has told the royal commission that he’s willing to return to Australia to give evidence when Ballarat hearings resume again later in the year.

The archbishops’ joint statement commended Cardinal Pell for how he’s handled criticism, saying he has acknowledged mistakes frankly, and apologised for them.

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

Cardinal George Pell receives support from Catholic archbishops in open letter ahead of royal commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Seven prominent Catholic officials from around Australia have written an open letter endorsing Cardinal George Pell ahead of his next appearance at the royal commission into child sexual abuse.

Five archbishops and two bishops signed the statement which described the former archbishop of Sydney as a “man of integrity who is committed to helping others”.

“His style can be robust and direct; he does not wear his heart on his sleeve,” the statement said.

“But underneath he has a big heart for people.”

The statement also said Cardinal Pell had previously acknowledged his mistakes and apologised for the Catholic Church’s handling of sexual abuse cases.

“Cardinal Pell was one of the first bishops in the world to put in place a comprehensive church response to investigate allegations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy and to provide survivors with redress and counselling,” the statement said.

“He has responded to criticisms that have been made of his handling of these matters over the years, acknowledged mistakes frankly, and apologised for them.

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

Ex-Temple Israel Rabbi Pleads Not Guilty to Larceny Charge

MASSACHUSETTS
Patch

By DANIEL LIBON (Patch Staff)

Former Temple Israel Rabbi Barry Starr pleaded not guilty to larceny over $250 and embezzlement by a fiduciary Tuesday in Dedham Superior Court.

The former leader of the conservative Sharon temple is accused of taking nearly $500,000 from his synagogue to pay a Quincy man who was blackmailing him.

Prosecutors say that Starr altered the amount on checks written to the rabbi’s discretionary fund. Those checks were allegedly deposited by Quincy man Nicholas Zemeitus or Alexa Anderson, who use to live with Zemeitus in Milton according to the Boston Globe.

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

Ex-priest wants new child sexual abuse trial

TENNESSEE
WCYB

By Lenny Cohen, Digital Media Manager

A former East Tennessee priest wants his child sexual abuse conviction thrown out and a new trial granted.

That’s what lawyers for William Casey filed motions for in a state appeals court, Wednesday.

They claim his attorneys were ineffective during his trial, so the conviction should be overturned.

They also want the trial judge and prosecutors off the case.

In 2011, a jury convicted Casey of sexually abusing a boy while he was a priest at St. Dominic’s parish in Kingsport, nearly 40 years ago.

Casey essentially received a life sentence.

He was also convicted of similar offenses in North Carolina.

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NY–Prosecutor seeks info on rabbi

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, June 3

Statement by Mary Caplan of Manhattan, national board member of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 917-439-4187, Mcaplan682@aol.com )

We’re grateful that Bronx prosecutors are using their bully pulpit to beg possible victims of a rabbi to come forward. At the same time, we’re disappointed in synagogue officials who are selfishly acting timid and callous.

[New York Times]

Rabbi Rosenblatt of Riverdale Jewish Center is accused of taking “young congregants to a gym to play squash or racquetball and then to the shower, and, often naked, to the sauna or hot tub.” Some of the boys, now grown, said that he “gawked at their naked bodies, or would often rest a hand on a clothed leg during one-on-one nighttime chats at the rabbi’s house.”

We urge anyone with information or suspicions about Rosenblatt to call law enforcement authorities – not synagogue staff – right away.

Finally, shame on Rosenblatt for attacking his accusers and their alleged motives. We see predators doing this all the time – impugning the intentions of those who expose their misdeeds. Rosenblatt has no idea why some are accusing him and speculating about what drives them will only deter others who have seen, suspected or suffered sexual misconduct from speaking up.

Rosenblatt can defend himself without assailing others. That’s what he should do.

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.

Embarrassed Priest Calls For A New General Council Now

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

A bold Australian priest, noting in the UK Tablet that Catholics are humiliated by priests’ sins being revealed at the Royal Commission, has acknowledged “It’s hard being a Catholic today; it’s hard being a Catholic priest today…”. Fr. Peter Daly sadly adds, “Indeed, such is the extent of the crisis that in some circles priest and paedophile have become interchangeable words.”

The head of the Australian bishops conference, Archbishop Philip Wilson, is under indictment with an alleged priest child abuse cover up charge, while Australia’s lone cardinal, George Pell, shamefully publicly threatens legal action against an abuse survivor, Peter Saunders, selected by the pope to advise him. What a mess!

Daly’s prohetic, and yet perceptive and sensible, if not urgent suggestion, is (in italics): ” … I suggest, then, that our Pope consider convening an Ecumenical Council of the Church – Vatican III – in which the “hired men” culture is addressed and called to account, victims are afforded a voice, a collective wisdom is given room to breathe and act, and the “feminine genius”, the voice of women, is given a central role.

It is better for a man, for a church, to roam the streets destitute, foraging for the bread of truth, than to roam the corridors of power feasting on privileges and food that does not last. Ours is a profound responsibility: to humbly and gently walk alongside others, especially the most vulnerable, no matter the cost. …”

That’s what it means to be a truly Catholic Church.”

Pope Francis likely knows well by now that his current Vatican reform strategy needs some major redirection. The pope’s (1) well publicized Curia shaming and reshuffling, (2) limited financial management makeover, (3) clerically dominated Family Synods, and (4) slow moving abuse commission, as presently structured, cannot likely stop the Catholic Church from sinking further and faster in the escalating tsunami of scandals. That seems clear enough.

Moreover, the pope has yet even to address publicly the most needed structural “fix” — establishing transparent procedures for the selection and oversight of the 0.01% Church leadership by the worldwide Catholic 99.9% faithful. As presently planned, the Final Synod will not even discuss this key reform, which is absolutely required to avoid more scandals under future popes.

Importantly, informed Vatican journalist, Robert Mickens, had recently reported on a “rumor” that some experts at pontifical universities in Rome have been “asked to quietly prepare preliminary documents for an ecumenical council to be called during or after the 2015 Synod.”

While Mickens understandably appeared skeptical, this rumor makes a lot of sense. Pope Francis may have no strategic choice at his Final Synod in four months but to call in for a full ecumenical council, as Pope John XXIII did over half a century ago, to keep Francis’ reform effort alive as he begins his eightieth year. After the flawed Synods, a council with a broad and representative participation of lay Catholics, female and male, will likely be Pope Francis’ final chance to save the Catholic Church and to compel his successor to follow Francis’ lead. It is also how the Catholic Church resolved many earlier crises.

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SERVITES ORDER PULLNG OUT

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

June 3, 2015

After 88 years of staffing Affton’s Seven Holy Fathers parish, a religious order known as the Servites are pulling out because their numbers are declining.

Fr. John Brennell, an archdiocesan priest, is now the pastor. Records about abusive Servite priests – and clerics from two other religious orders that operate here, the Carmelites and the Redemptorists – were recently released in California

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NOTRE DAME SCHOOL CONTINUES TO RE-VICTIMIZE A SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIM BY NOT ACKNOWLEDGING HER ABUSE AND HELPING HER HEAL

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

MEDIA RELEASE

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 2015

WHAT
A demonstration and leafleting at a New York City Catholic girls’ high school graduation (Notre Dame School) alerting the families of graduates, faculty and staff, and the general public of the re-victimization of a sexual abuse victim who is an alumna of the school, former teacher at the school, and former nun

WHERE
On the public sidewalk outside The Cooper Union, 30 Cooper Square, New York, NY 10003 where the Notre Dame School graduation will be held

WHEN
Thursday, June 4, 2015 from 5:00 PM until 6:30 PM

WHO
Cecilia Springer, an 84 year-old alumna of Notre Dame School, Class of 1948, who was approximately 14 years of age and a sophomore at Notre Dame School when the Principal of the school, a nun, sexually abused her; Dr. Robert M. Hoatson, co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families; and other supporters

WHY
Cecilia Springer became a Sister of St. Ursula following graduation from college in spite of the fact that she was sexually abused by a nun, Sister Mary Andrew (aka Sr. Frances Doyle, SU) when Cecilia Springer was a high school sophomore at Notre Dame School in Manhattan. She left the Sisters of St. Ursula many years later after it became unbearable for her to remain in a religious order of women which tolerated her sexual abuse at her alma mater, Notre Dame School. After being interviewed by representatives of the school and religious order, the Sisters of St. Ursula and Notre Dame School refused to offer her any assistance that will allow her to live a decent life as a senior citizen and allow her to try to heal. They refused to believe Cecilia Springer’s credible allegations. Cecilia Springer and her supporters will call on Notre Dame School and the Sisters of St. Ursula to do the right thing by acknowledging that Cecilia Springer is a sexual abuse victim of Sr. Mary Andrew, apologizing for what happened to her, and assisting her to live a life that is more free of worry and directed toward healing.

CONTACTS

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

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Role to help abuse victims ‘start the process of healing’

AUSTRALIA
The Morning Bulletin

Lisa Benoit | 4th Jun 2015

MELISSA Davey’s job is to help victims of abuse in the Catholic Church system tell their story and begin the healing process.

The pastoral response co-ordinator for the Rockhampton Diocese yesterday spoke about the immense courage displayed by victims of abuse to come forward.

She said it was vital these people knew there was support for them.

“This role gives that opportunity for people to start the process of healing, ongoing healing and reconciliation,” she said.

Catholic Bishop Michael McCarthy, who has been in the top role for just over a year, said the church had taken steps to ensure the church’s dark history of sexual abuse was never repeated.

He appointed Ms Davey to the position in September last year before the Royal Commission held a public hearing, in April, into child sex abuse in Rockhampton.

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Josh Duggar molested 5-year-old sister, new report details

UNITED STATES
San Jose Mercury News

[with video]

Compiled by Martha Ross

A 15-year-old Josh Duggar confessed to molesting his 5-year-old sister while he held her on his lap and read her stories, according to a newly released police report obtained by In Touch Weekly.

The 2006 report also provides other new details about how his reality TV star parents, Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar of TLC’s “19 and Counting,” failed to alert authorities for more than a year that their oldest son had inappropriately touched his sisters and a family friend, said the New York Daily News.

The new information comes the same day that Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar will address the allegations in a pre-taped interview with Fox News Channel’s Megyn Kelly, airing 6 p.m. tonight.

“We will sit down with Megyn Kelly on Fox to share our hearts with you about the pain that we walked through as a family 12 years ago, the tears we all shed and the forgiveness that was given,” the Duggars posted on their website.

Kelly said the interview is the Duggars’ attempt to save their show, according to Deadline Hollywood. TLC pulled repeats of the show from its lineup as 20 of its sponsors lined up to say they would not advertise on the program.

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Pastor is arrested, accused of ordering starvation of boy who died

TEXAS
Norwalk Reflector

Aracely Meza claimed to perform miracles. The Balch Springs pastor said on her website and to her neighbors that God had helped her heal the sick, return movement to a paralyzed man and make her daughter grow instantly taller — one leg at a time.

But on March 22, Meza would later admit to police, her supposed supernatural powers failed. In a ceremony, Meza tried unsuccessfully to resurrect a 2-year-old boy who died after she ordered food withheld from him for 25 days until he looked like an “alien” because he “had demons,” according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

The boy and his parents were among eight adults and six children who authorities said lived in Meza’s home-based church, Iglesia Internacional Jesus es el Rey located in Balch Springs.

Five children, ages one to 13, from “several families,” were moved from the home into foster care following Meza’s arrest, Texas Child Protective Services spokeswoman Marissa Gonzales said Wednesday.

The agency was not previously involved with the household and is assisting in the search for the boy’s body and the parents, Gonzales said.

The dead boy’s parents wrapped him in a blanket and took him to Mexico for burial, church members who lived in the house told police. On Wednesday, local police and Mexican authorities continued searching for the boy’s body and his parents.

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Local Catholics frustrated by bishop’s inflexibility

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., May 29, 2015

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

GALLUP — Local Catholics from Gallup’s St. John Vianney’s Parish are frustrated that their own bishop will not talk with them.

They had hoped Bishop James S. Wall or the Rev. Kevin Finnegan, the current diocesan chancellor and vicar general, would meet with them Wednesday evening to discuss the bishop’s recent controversial decisions regarding their parish and the reasoning behind those decisions.

However, according to Bryan Wall, a parishioner and a former Gallup city councilor, the bishop and Finnegan ignored the meeting request, so the media was invited instead. Bryan Wall, who is not related to the bishop, has been serving as the chairman of an informal group of concerned parishioners. He said he tried to contact Bishop Wall through a personal visit to the Gallup chancery, two phone calls and two letters.

Because the group did not have permission to use the parish hall, about two dozen church members gathered at a local restaurant for a 90 minute meeting that opened and closed with prayer.

“I’m very disappointed with the bishop on this,” parishioner Gene Pacheco said during Wednesday’s meeting. Pacheco, a longtime Gallup businessman and Gallup’s Senior of the Year, has served as a vice chairman of the parishioners’ group.

“Just meet with us, we’re people … ,” parishioner Kathy Schmitt agreed. “You know, Jesus was accessible.”

“It is, from my perspective, it is wrong for the bishop not to speak,” parishioner Emilio Barriga told the group. As Bishop Wall is the spiritual shepherd of the Gallup Diocese, Barriga added, his refusal to speak with his sheep, his own Catholic people, causes dissention in the Church.

Public Outcry

The parish controversy erupted on Mother’s Day weekend when it was announced that Bishop Wall was immediately transferring the church’s popular pastor, the Rev. James E. Walker, to Bloomfield to replace the Rev. Bob Mathieu, who had resigned from ministry because of inappropriate use of social media. It was also announced that the church would be reduced to just a chapel, with only two weekly Masses, no religious education program, no resident priest, and the loss of some sacraments like baptism and marriage.

A public outcry, including the formation of the parishioners’ group, resulted in Bishop Wall reversing some of those decisions. Walker was still transferred, much to the dismay of his congregation, but it was announced the parish would not be reduced to a chapel, and most of the weekly Masses and religious education programs for children would continue. The fate of sacraments offered in the church has not been decided.

Finnegan has now been appointed pastor of St. John Vianney. His announced decision to replace youth altar servers with adult volunteers continues to be controversial.

Chancery’s Response

Suzanne Hammons, the diocesan media coordinator, was asked Thursday why Bishop Wall or Finnegan did not agree to meet with parishioners. She was also asked why Bishop Wall does not respond to emails, letters, phone calls and requests for meetings from Catholics in the Gallup Diocese.

Hammons, who said she sympathized with the parishioners because she also attends St. John Vianney, did not answer either question. Instead, she said Finnegan “has spoken directly to several parishioners” about their concerns.

“Once again, we welcome anyone to come to us directly – we do wish to address their concerns, but cannot productively do so through a newspaper article,” she added.

Closure Fears

Eddie Ward, another vice chairman of the parishioners’ group, said church members are relieved the parish will continue as an active church. However, he admitted many parishioners are concerned that chancery officials may still close St. John Vianney in the future.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re doing it gradually,” said parishioner Norma Jean Jones, who questioned the purpose of the meeting since Bishop Wall wasn’t there to answer questions.

If the bishop had agreed to meet with church members, parishioner Richard Schmitt said, he would have asked the bishop what more can they do to keep the parish going.

“But he won’t talk to us,” Schmitt said. “I wish they’d just give us a reason for these decisions.”

Ward’s wife, Anna, who described herself as “a Catholic for 80 years,” said she felt somewhat assured after Finnegan celebrated his first Mass but is still concerned about a possible closure.

“We don’t want a chapel,” she said. “We want our little church.”

Since the initial announcement, a number of local Catholics have expressed the fear that St. John Vianney will be closed eventually as a tactic to force parishioners into attending the bishop’s more conservative Cathedral.

Devastated Reaction

When asked about Finnegan’s decision to eliminate youth altar servers, Ward said he wanted to know from Finnegan if the decision was related to Finnegan’s physical disabilities or was rooted in other reasons.

Two fathers from the parish, however, shared how the decision has impacted their families.

Barriga, who said he had been an altar boy as a youth, said his own son was personally hurt by the announcement. According to Barriga, his son has been volunteering as an altar server and interpreted the announcement as meaning he was no longer wanted at the parish. Barriga said he is willing to be an adult altar server for Finnegan, but with his son at his side.

“If you don’t want my son up there, then I’m not going to be up there,” Barriga said.

Duane Casias said he and his wife have encouraged their 17year-old to serve as a reader at the parish and have encouraged their younger son to consider being an altar server.

“We were so devastated,” Casias said of his family’s reaction to the Mother’s Day announcement. A week later, he said, they experienced another blow when they heard Finnegan wanted to eliminate youth servers.

“What is this saying to our children?” an emotional Casias said. “You’re not needed.”

Barriga, who referred to his military background, said he understood the importance of following a chain of command. However, he compared the sometimes authoritarian actions of Catholic bishops to military generals who expect blind obedience.

“They failed us,” Barriga said of Gallup’s chancery officials. “Not because of what they did, but because of what they didn’t do.”

Barriga encouraged others in the group to be articulate and intelligent as they continue to try to communicate their concerns to chancery officials.

“The most important thing people need to do is keep praying,” Barriga said, adding parishioners should follow Jesus’ example of showing love and kindness to those who treat them unfairly.

“We would if we could see them,” Kathy Schmitt replied.

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Australian Catholics humiliated by the sins of the Fathers

AUSTRALIA
The Tablet (UK)

03 June 2015 by Fr Peter Day

This past couple of weeks the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Australia has shone yet more light on the terrible abuse committed by church leaders; this time in Ballarat, Victoria. It’s enough to bring a man to his knees.

The public hearings have revealed some gut-wrenching personal accounts: stories of young people (and their families) crippled by sexual abuse; stories of utter betrayal; stories we would rather not hear – stories we must hear.

It’s hard being a Catholic today; it’s hard being a Catholic priest today.

Indeed, such is the extent of the crisis that in some circles priest and paedophile have become interchangeable words. It is as if we have moved from an unhealthy, “A priest would never do that”, to a just as unhealthy, “He’s a priest, so he probably did do that.”

The following question in a letter in The Weekend Australian epitomises this collapse in trust: “Are there any parents with young children who still take them to church? If so, can they explain why?”
Our collective shame is deep because good people are being condemned by association.
But we must not fall prey to self-pity because, we are not nearly as innocent, or as damaged, as the children who are only now being given a voice.

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Accused pastor’s lawyer says underage girl probably lying about rape: ‘She consented 6 times after that’<

PENNSYLVANIA
The Raw Story

DAVID EDWARDS
03 JUN 2015

The lawyer for a Pennsylvania youth pastor who has been charged with rape suggested this week that the underage victim may have been lying because she consented to sex on other occasions.

According to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, court documents filed against 31-year-old Daniel Allen Jack of Amplify Church alleged that the youth pastor first met the victim in December 2014 when she joined the church youth group.

By January, Jack was using text messages to gain the trust of the girl, the complaint alleged. And he created fake identities on Google and gave her a second cell phone so the two could talk privately.

Before Easter, Jack was said to have taken to girl to his parents’ home, where he suggested that the two should have sex. But when he started kissing and touching her, she cried and refused to cooperate, the complaint said.

When she refused to have sex with Jack again, he allegedly held her on the floor and forcibly raped her.

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*Pope Francis Shamefully Fails To Protect Children From Abusers and To See Justice Done To Survivors

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

Pope Francis can no longer project to the world an image that is merely a mix of a winning smile, sound bites and Tweets, public relations photo ops, media focused trips and vague pronouncements on capitalism and climate change, all seemingly amplified by outlets of opportunistic billionaires like Rupert Murdoch that appear to need papal support with fundamentalist voters to elect ‘low tax” politicians.

Reality has overtaken the pope’s non-stop 24/7 image making. The pope’s meager two year record makes clear that protecting children from abusive priests and their complicit bishops, and administering justice to abuse survivors, were always and still are much lower priorities than protecting cardinals from prosecutors and Vatican wealth from survivors’ lawyers.

Francis has failed spectacularly as pope, as he did in Argentina as cardinal, to protect children from abusers and to give justice to survivors. He is continuing to fail to meet this top challenge, as two current events confirm.

The pope has now let his top adviser, Cardinal George Pell, use public legal threats to bully prophetic Peter Saunders. The pope himself, after an intensive one one one private meeting, selected Saunders as his personal choice as an abuse survivor member of the pope’s farcical “go slow and lightly” priest child abuse commission. The pope must now, out of basic human decency, stand by his choice of Peter Saunders, who has already suffered too much from clerical abuse. Instead, the Jesuit pope and his Jesuit mouthpiece, Fr. Lombardi, have shamefully failed to do so.

The pope has also let his Archbishop of Milwaukee continue to behave with cruelty to abuse survivors, including some of the 200 deaf victims sexually abused as children by a single priest, as Fr. Tom Doyle recently noted here. The Archbishop reportedly continues, in effect, to dissipate scarce resources on his lawyers’ stonewalling efforts over the $50+ million of Archdiocesan cash that the Vatican let Cardinal Timothy Dolan earlier bury in a cemetery trust, evidently to make it unavailable for desperate survivors’ just claims.

The pope could likely with a phone call order the Archbishop to restore the funds to the Archdiocese’s regular assets, but he has failed to do this. Instead, the pope utilizes his limited time on meeting with the Harlem Globetrotters, the passengers of the “Children’s Train” , and even Pentecostal pastors in advance of next year’s US presidential election for which the pope is evidently allying the Vatican and his US bishops with US evangelicals to elect a “Vatican friendlier” US Republican president.

Now, the Vatican’s top clerical expert on the pope’s abuse commission with Saunders, Jesuit Hans Zollner, has confirmed that currently there is no canonical recourse to hold accountable local bishops who cover-up sexual abuse in their diocese. After years of Vatican “zero tolerance bulloney”, the pope should be ashamed over his lack of serious efforts to curtail priest sexual abuse by making bishops accountable — the only way this stain on the Church can be eradicated.

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Josh Duggar Scandal: Police Report Reveals ’19 Kids And Counting’ Star’s 5-Year-Old Sister Told Parents About Abuse

UNITED STATES
International Business Times

By Caitlyn Hitt

Even more disturbing details have emerged surrounding the Josh Duggar molestation scandal. New reports reveal the nature of the “19 Kids and Counting” reality star’s crimes as well as just how many times his alleged behavior occurred.

According to a police report, issued by the Washington County Sheriff’s Office in Arkansas and obtained by In Touch, Josh, now 27, had inappropriately touched five underraged girls on several occasions between 2002 and 2003. The report reveals that Josh “had just turned 14” when he first went to his parents, Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar, about his behavior. The eldest Duggar child reportedly admitted that he “had been touching [redacted, his sisters] on the breasts and vaginal areas” as they slept. He claimed this “occurred four to five times.” Josh also said he once “fondled” the breasts of a close family friend who had been sleeping on the family’s couch.

Josh’s behavior was not limited to sleeping victims. According to the police report, he groped one of his sisters as she sat in his lap reading in March 2013. At the time, Josh’s sister was reportedly 5 years old. The young girl, whose name had been redacted from the document, went to Jim Bob, who is referred to by his legal name, James, in the report, and Michelle following the incident.

“James said that [redacted] was reading to his 5 year old sister and as she was sitting on his lap, he had touched her breasts and vaginal areas. James said that [redacted] then ran out of the room and called him and told him what he had done,” reads the police report.

Rather than report the crime, the “19 Kids and Counting” stars sent Josh to a Christian program where he was forced to do manual labor. It wasn’t until nearly 16 months after the initial confession that the now-famous reality TV parents got Josh and his victims into counseling. It remains unclear if the counseling was by choice or court ordered. Legal sources claim Jim Bob and Michelle could face jail time for their failure to take action after learning about the abuse.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Barry M. Meehan

RHODE ISLAND
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: A priest of the Providence RI diocese, ordained in 1978, Barry Meehan worked in parishes in West Warwick, Cranston, and Providence. In December 2012 a man reported to the diocese that Meehan had sexually assaulted him between 1986 and 1991, when the man was a teenage boy. State Police were notified; during their investigation a second accuser was discovered who said Meehan sexually abused him when he was a teenager in 1991 and 1992. Meehan was placed on leave in January 2013. He denied the allegations. In November 2014 he was arrested and charged with five counts of first degree sexual assault; he pleaded not guilty. Meehan was laicized May 7, 2015.

Ordained: June 10, 1978
Laicized: May 7, 2015

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Bronx DA Reportedly Opens Criminal Investigation Into Leading Modern Orthodox Rabbi

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

The Bronx District Attorney’s Bureau on Child Abuse and Sex Crimes has reportedly opened a criminal investigation into the conduct of Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt of the Riverdale Jewish Center.

Rabbi Asher Lopatin, the president of the Yeshivat Chovevei Torah Rabbinical School, writes:

I am sad to send this out, but protecting our children and those vulnerable is paramount. It is important to aid the authorities in any way we can.

The Bronx County District Attorney Bureau on Child Abuse and Sex Crimes is investigating the story and stories in The New York Times article about Rabbi [Jonathan] Rosenblatt. Individuals with pertinent information to the investigation are asked to call (718) 838 7382, a dedicated line for this investigation, to speak with an Assistant District Attorney on a team handling the case. Please reach out even if you would like to remain anonymous and not have your name on the record, as they are in an information gathering phase at this point. Please also do so even if you believe your experience lies outside a statute of limitations as any information on patterns of behavior can be useful.

Meanwhile, the Jewish Week reported that leading RJC members tried to organize a buyout of Rosenblatt’s contract three years ago over his alleged ogling of nude boys and young men, but Rosenblatt insisted he had done nothing wrong and would not take it. And Rosenblatt’s wife, an attorney, threatened to sue the RJC if it fired her husband or did anything to shame him or hurt his employment.

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With Sauna ‘Secret’ Out, Riverdale Shul Faces Tough Choice

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

Wed, 06/03/2015
Gary Rosenblatt
Editor and Publisher

Three years ago several prominent members of the Riverdale Jewish Center (RJC), the 700-member Modern Orthodox congregation, met privately with their longtime rabbi, Jonathan Rosenblatt, and offered to arrange a generous buyout for him. They told him that the persistent rumors about his allegedly inappropriate behavior with boys and young men were bound to become public at some point and it would be in his and his family’s best interest, and for the congregation as well, if he accepted an offer to resign quietly.

If he didn’t, he was told, “this could all end badly,” according to a member of the congregation with knowledge of the meeting.

“It was not meant as a threat, but rather that it would hit the press eventually and no one would see things as he did,” the person explained this weekend.

“Unfortunately, he refused, and now it’s all out there,” the person said, referring to the thorough New York Times May 31 report on Rabbi Rosenblatt’s “unusual” behavior that included inviting young men to discuss personal matters while sitting naked in the sauna with him.

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Debate Over the Rabbi and the Sauna

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By ANDY NEWMAN and SHARON OTTERMAN
MAY 29, 2015

For years, Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt, the leader of an affluent Modern Orthodox synagogue in the Bronx, did something unusual with the boys in his congregation.

He took them, some as young as 12, to the gym to play squash or racquetball, then showered beside them and took them into the sauna, where — often naked, and with them often naked — he engaged the boys in searching conversations about their lives, problems and faith.

Some liked talking to the rabbi. But others felt uncomfortable. At the time, the late 1980s, people at Rabbi Rosenblatt’s synagogue, the Riverdale Jewish Center, quietly urged him to stop. He said he would. They believe he eventually did. And because the rabbi was not accused of sexual misconduct, and because this was a time less attuned to issues of clerical impropriety, not much more came of it.

As Rabbi Rosenblatt, an accomplished scholar who married into rabbinical royalty, grew to be one of New York City’s most prominent Orthodox leaders, he took older squash partners to the sauna: college students, rabbinical interns, young men from his congregation.

Many enjoyed the sauna discussions. Rabbi Rosenblatt acquired a reputation as a great mentor. He told several people the sauna talks — in the Jewish tradition of men enjoying fellowship in the shvitz, or steam baths — were a key to his success.

But some people objected to the practice. They said the rabbi was using his authority and position to see his disciples naked. Major Jewish institutions told Rabbi Rosenblatt that inviting his charges to the sauna was not appropriate rabbinical conduct.
hodox rabbis, later made him agree to a plan to limit his activities with his own congregation.

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Bronx Rabbi Case Prompts Prosecutors to Ask People to Come Forward

NEW YORK
The New York Times

By ANDY NEWMAN
JUNE 3, 2015

Prosecutors in the Bronx are asking people to come forward in the case of a prominent Modern Orthodox rabbi, Jonathan Rosenblatt, who frequently took boys as young as 12 into the sauna naked.

“If something happened within the statute of limitations, we will investigate,” Terry Raskyn, a spokeswoman for the Bronx district attorney’s office, said on Wednesday.

An article in The New York Times on Sunday described how in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Rabbi Rosenblatt, of the Riverdale Jewish Center, would take young congregants to a gym to play squash or racquetball and then to the shower, and, often naked, to the sauna or hot tub. He would have long talks with them in the sauna that he described as part of his mentoring process.

Some of the boys, who are now grown, said that Rabbi Rosenblatt gawked at their naked bodies, or would often rest a hand on a clothed leg during one-on-one nighttime chats at the rabbi’s house.

No one has accused Rabbi Rosenblatt of sexual touching.

For all but the most serious crimes, the statute of limitations in New York State is generally, at most, six years.

Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt Credit David Goldman for The New York Times
Even if an offense occurred outside the statute of limitations, Ms. Raskyn said, the district attorney’s office provides counseling and other services. “We will help anyone who is a victim of a crime in the Bronx,” she said.

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Sex, saunas, and rabbis: Where are the boundaries?

UNITED STATES
Haaretz

By Rabbi Dan Dorsch | Jun. 3, 2015

Recent scandals involving rabbis who violated clergy-congregant boundaries are making it difficult for good, honest leaders to counsel the people we serve. Between Barry Freundel, who clearly broke the law when he spied on naked women in the mikveh, and Jonathan Rosenblatt, whose custom of mentoring young men whilst naked in the sauna lies somewhere in the legal gray area, one thing is clear: these rabbis’ errors in judgment have eroded the public’s trust in religious leaders as sources of safe, spiritual guidance.

Since graduating from seminary five years ago, I, myself, have felt ill-equipped, at times, to handle pastoral care issues related to sexuality when working with congregants confronted by infidelity, marital problems and divorce. None of the popular rabbinic “handbooks” on the subject made any mention of how to handle these issues as they relate to sex, and none of my classes at the seminary ever talked about how to deal with them. So I decided to sign up for an online course called “Sexual Issues for Jewish Clergy.”

During this program, I discovered that rabbis often struggle with the same kind of challenges concerning sexuality and boundaries that their congregants face. Actions that for me seemed common sense and worth undertaking for my own protection – like giving counsel with my door open, and almost never agreeing to meet a person without someone else being present in the building – were far from established common practice. But what may be common sense for some rabbis is not for others. The New York Times article about Rosenblatt is a stark reminder of this fact.

There is also the issue of protecting both rabbis and congregants. A 2008 Baylor University study presented the testimonies of 47 people who described their personal experiences with clergy misconduct. As I watched the videos, I was struck by how often the victims’ communities discouraged them from speaking out. Even when the victims were repeatedly violated, the congregation or their movement’s umbrella organization ultimately sided and protected the violating rabbi.

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Rabbi Barry Starr Scrambled To Repay Synagogue $458K in Hush Money

MASSACHUSETTS
The Jewish Daily Forward

A Boston-area rabbi pleaded not guilty to charges that he stole from his temple to pay off a man who was blackmailing him for an alleged affair with a teenage male.

Rabbi Barry Starr, 65, who resigned last year from Temple Israel in Sharon, Massachusetts, entered the plea Tuesday in Norfolk Superior Court, the Boston Globe reported. Several former congregants were in the courtroom to support him, according to the newspaper.

Starr is charged with embezzlement and larceny over $250. He is facing a maximum sentence of 15 years in state prison.

The rabbi allegedly paid a total of $458,300 between 2012 and 2014 — more than $360,000 of that from his discretionary fund — according to prosecutors.

He also is accused of altering donated checks for up to 100 times their value and borrowing thousands of dollars from an elderly congregant, a Holocaust survivor.

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Sheriff’s Report: One Of Josh Duggar’s Alleged Victims Was 5-Year-Old Girl

UNITED STATES
Talking Points Memo

By CATHERINE THOMPSON
Published JUNE 3, 2015

A 5-year-old was among the young girls Josh Duggar, the eldest son of the family made famous by TLC’s “19 Kids and Counting,” allegedly molested when he was a teenager, according to a sheriff’s report published Wednesday by tabloid magazine In Touch.

In Touch previously published a 2006 report from the Springdale, Arkansas Police Department that showed Duggar was investigated for allegedly molesting five girls from 2002-2003, when he was 14 years old. That report was heavily blacked out throughout.

The age of one of Duggar’s alleged victims was revealed in a contemporaneous report from the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, which was also involved in the investigation. That report appeared to have blacked out only Duggar’s and his alleged victims’ names.

Both reports contain the same interview sheriff’s Detective Gary Connor conducted with the Duggar family in December 2006.

In the interview, Jim Bob Duggar told Connor that one of the incidents of molestation occurred in March 2003. He said that Josh Duggar had called him to say that he’d inappropriately touched a 5-year-old girl who was sitting on his lap as he read to her. The Duggar patriarch also told the detective that his son put his hand up a girl’s dress “sometime during this time frame.”

The sheriff’s report, which reads more cleanly than the Springdale police report, also makes it easier to ascertain the timeline of the alleged molestation incidents. Jim Bob Duggar told the detective that his son came crying to him in March 2002 to say that he’d inappropriately touched girls “4 to 5 times” while they were sleeping. He said Josh Duggar came to him again in July 2002 to say that he’d inappropriately touched another girl, according to the report.

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Former Priest, Convicted Of Rape, Is Seeking ‘Post-Conviction Relief’

TENNESSEE
Greeneville Sun

Ken Little

A new lawyer for William Casey has new strategies to get another trial for the former Roman Catholic priest.

Francis X. Santore Jr. plans to file a formal petition by Thursday in Sullivan County Criminal Court seeking post-conviction relief for Casey, who was convicted in 2011 of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of aggravated rape in connection with the molestation of then-altar-boy Warren Tucker between 1979 and 1980.

Casey, now 81, was a longtime resident of the Camp Creek community in Greene County.

He was sentenced after conviction to a minimum of 35 years in prison by then-Sullivan County Criminal Court Judge Robert H. Montgomery Jr., who is now a judge on the state Court of Criminal Appeals.

Since sentencing in July 2011, Casey has been an inmate at the Tennessee Department of Correction’s Northeast Correctional Facility in Mountain City. He will not be eligible for parole until at least 2026, when he is 92.

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Why more reports of rabbinic sex abuse are a good thing

NEW YORK
Times of Israel

BY AMANDA BORSCHEL-DAN June 3, 2015

Decades of eyebrow-raising at male bonding methods morphed into suspicions of abuse this week as the Bronx Country District Attorney Bureau on Child Sex Abuse and Sex Crimes opened an investigation against New York Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt.

On Friday, Rosenblatt, for over 30 years the rabbi of the Riverdale Jewish Center Synagogue, was the topic of a lengthy New York Times article portraying his decades-long allegedly inappropriate behavior with young unclothed males. The article described how Rosenblatt would invite boys as young as 12 to play squash, followed by bathing and a sauna.

Some of those involved, now men, claimed the rabbi gawked at their nakedness; others weren’t bothered at all. But what is clear from the NY Times article and follow-up media pieces is that Rosenblatt’s questionable behavior over the past three decades was an open secret that left many boys and young men uncomfortable.

Now, the Bronx District Attorney is calling upon these men to describe their experiences — even anonymously — and aid in charting the rabbi’s behavior patterns.

This simple step — the on-record recounting of an uncomfortable encounter — is a key step to ending abuse, say activists. The more light is shed on irregular or abusive experiences, the greater is the deterrent for perpetrators.

There is evidence of the beginnings of change, say experts, as social media and online survivor communities provide anonymous or nonthreatening platforms for survivors to testify. And, they predict numbers of incidents in the clergy will wane as rabbinical seminaries take increased screening precautions and institute mental health formation as part of the student rabbis’ training.

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Kevin Mulhearn: Horace Mann report shows why New York state needs to reform statute of limitations in sex abuse cases

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
Tuesday, June 2, 2015

Attorney Kevin Mulhearn has been battling for sexual abuse victims for years: The Orangeburg, N.Y., attorney overcame numerous legal obstacles to settle a landmark lawsuit filed by a dozen men who claimed Poly Prep covered up years of assaults by the elite Brooklyn school’s longtime football coach, Phil Foglietta. Mulhearn has also represented men and women who claimed two other iconic New York schools, Horace Mann and Yeshiva University, also covered up years of sexual abuse by staff and faculty members.

In the following column, Mulhearn explains why New York lawmakers should pass the Child Victims Act. The bill sponsored by Assemblywoman Margaret Markey (D-Queens) calls for the elimination of criminal and civil statutes of limitations for future child abuse victims; it would also open up a one-year window for victims of past crimes to pursue criminal and civil cases.

Last week, the Honorable Leslie Crocker Snyder (ret.), founder of the Manhattan DA’s Sex Crimes Prosecution Bureau and co-author of New York State’s Rape Shield Law, issued her report on sexual abuse that occurred at the elite Horace Mann School in the Bronx in the ‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s. The report, titled “Making Schools Safe,” commissioned by the Horace Mann Action Coalition, concludes that at Horace Mann at least 64 students were sexually abused by as many as 22 faculty and staff. Judge Snyder’s report describes the scope and extent of the parade of sexual abuse at Horace Mann and makes pointed recommendations for how independent schools can protect our children. For anyone with children in New York schools, especially private schools, this thoughtful and insightful Report, despite (or maybe because of) its repugnant subject matter, should be required reading.

The squalid abuse facts themselves are horrendous in their own right but the most disturbing component of the report is the craven response of various school officials and trustees to sex abuse complaints made by abused students. The report describes a prolonged, multi-decade Horace Mann cover-up, highlighted by the loss or destruction of voluminous sex abuse records and the deliberate indifference of a former headmaster who himself engaged in the sexual abuse of young boys. Like with the Catholic Church, Horace Mann officials confronted with direct allegations of sex abuse by soul-shattered victims were too often far more concerned with protecting the reputations of both institution and sex predator employees than the children entrusted to their care.

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Billy Graham’s Grandson Says This About Sexual Abuse in the Church

UNITED STATES
Charisma News

JESSILYN JUSTICE

When sexual abuse rocks the church, the reactions split believers into many camps: some avoid it, some preach forgiveness, some condemn.

And according to Boz Tchividjian, Billy Graham’s grandson and an advocate for sexual abuse victims, evangelical leaders remain largely quiet.

“Such an approach to sin is incredibly damaging to so many precious individuals who were sexually victimized for years and manipulated by perpetrators and church leaders into remaining silent,” Tchividjian writes of case of sexual abuse in the church.

“It tells them that their voice and experience doesn’t matter nearly as much as the voice of a judge or jury. It tells them that the reputation of the institution is more important than the beauty of their soul. The silence from Evangelical ‘leaders’ regarding the issue of child sexual abuse within the Church was deafening and spoke volumes.”

Now that the Duggar family is at the center of molestation allegations, Tchividjian reiterates that the Church needs to return to the gospel message.

“The gospel we preach is about a God who sacrificed himself for the individual,” Tchividjian tells the LaCrosse Tribune. ” … If we are preaching that gospel, churches need to sacrifice the church and stop sacrificing the individuals.”

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One Woman’s Bravery. One Woman Wakes Up To Her Own Power

UNITED STATES
Leslie Vernick

Morning friends,

I recently became aware of a tragic story that I want you to know about. Karen and Jordan Root were missionaries when she discovered that her husband was viewing child pornography. She was devastated, yet took the appropriate action, disclosed it to her mission board and church, where they promptly brought them home for an evaluation.

Jordan repented, and said he was never inappropriate with a child despite having a long-standing sexual attraction toward prepubescent females. Karen didn’t know if she could believe him, nor would ever be able to trust him or live with him since he’d lied to her for years. She filed for a legal annulment (and qualified for one) as she felt Jordan married her under fraudulent circumstances and lied to her even before their marriage.

Her mega church (Matt Chandler’s – The Village Church, in Dallas) embraced Jordan’s repentance, sought a path of healing and restoration for him with boundaries to his access to children in their church. Although they were seemingly sympathetic to Karen’s pain once they heard that Karen decided to seek an annulment of her marriage they began church discipline against Karen because she, as an adult Christian woman, made this decision without their knowledge, consent or approval.

(Karen was a member of The Village Church – which gives them the right to have some say in her life, however Karen respectfully withdrew her membership before she filed for annulment stating that she didn’t believe the church could effectively deal with both her and Jordan’s needs).

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ND–Predator priest from ND passes away

NORTH DAKOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, June 2, 2015

For more information:
David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP Director (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com

Predator priest from ND passes away
Victims urge Catholic bishops to “do outreach”
“Others may be suffering in shame and silence,” SNAP says
Attorney believes he may have assaulted at least 100 children

A credibly accused child molesting Catholic priest from North Dakota has passed away and a support group for clergy sex abuse victims is urging two bishops to “aggressively reach out” to others he may have hurt.

Last week, Catholic officials at St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville Minnesota announced that Fr. Richard Eckroth has died.

[CBS Minnesota]

On Friday, documents about Fr. Eckroth, a “credibly accused” predator, according to his church supervisors, were made public by an attorney who says that the cleric may have assaulted 100 kids.

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Public church discipline case a reminder of Baptist past, if not present

TEXAS
Baptist News

By Jeff Brumley

A Dallas megachurch got some unwanted publicity recently thanks to its harsh disciplining of a member some leaders believed improperly ended her marriage.

On May 28, however, Pastor Matt Chandler of the Village Church stepped in, stopped the process and later offered an apology to the woman who had left her husband when he admitted to a years-long child-porn habit, Christianity Today reported.

Public discipline actions like that brought against the woman at Village Church, a Southern Baptist multi-site congregation, may have been more common decades and centuries ago when Matthew 18 was followed more closely. But experts tell Baptist News Global such practices are increasingly rare today — and especially so in moderate and even conservative Baptist churches.

“I don’t think we gain very much by the public trashing of someone,” said Frank Broome, who has served as executive coordinator of the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship of Georgia for close to two decades. “In 18 years I have no example of anyone being dressed down.”

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Anwalt dementiert Bericht über höhere Opferzahlen

DEUTSCHLAND
Katholisch

[Lawyer denies report on higher abuse toll among members of the Domspatzen boys choir.]

Regensburg – 02.06.2015

Der Regensburger Anwalt Ulrich Weber hat Berichte zurückgewiesen, wonach die Zahl der Misshandlungsfälle bei den Regensburger Domspatzen höher liege als bisher angenommen. “Ich kann keine abweichenden Zahlen nennen”, sagte er am Dienstag in Regensburg der Katholischen Nachrichten-Agentur (KNA). Es sei falsch, von einem Anstieg zu sprechen. Weber untersucht zurzeit im Auftrag des Bistums Regensburg Fälle von Misshandlung und sexuellem Missbrauch bei dem Chor in den zurückliegenden Jahrzehnten. Bisher ging man von mindestens 72 Geschädigten aus.

Der Bayerische Rundfunk hatte am Montag unter Berufung auf Weber von einem Anstieg der Opferzahlen berichtet. Mit Blick auf die ersten Gespräche mit Opfern hatte der Rechtsanwalt dabei unter anderem von einem “Domino-Effekt” gesprochen. Dies habe sich aber nicht auf Zahlen bezogen, sondern auf die Auskunftsbereitschaft der Betroffenen, sagte Weber der KNA. Die Betroffenen fassten nach und nach Vertrauen zu ihm. Sein Abschlussbericht werde voraussichtlich nicht, wie ursprünglich geplant, bereits nach einem Jahr vorliegen, erläuterte der Jurist. “Ich gehe davon aus, dass es länger dauert.”

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Vatikan: Vertuschung als Kirchenrechts-Strafbestand geplant

VATIKAN
kathweb

[The Vatican child sexual abuse commission is concerned that current church law does not hold bishops accountable for covering-up sexual abuse. “Currently there is no canonical recourse against local bishops who fail to meet their responsibilities and cover-up sexual abuse in their dioceses,” said Fr. Hans Zollner, a member of the Child Protection Commission.]

Rom, 03.06.2015 (KAP) Der Vatikan prüft ein konsequenteres Vorgehen gegen Bischöfe, die sexuellen Missbrauch vertuschen. Die zuständigen Behörden begutachteten derzeit einen Entwurf der päpstlichen Kinderschutzkommission, wonach das Vertuschen von sexuellem Missbrauch durch Bischöfe ein eigener Straftatbestand im katholischen Kirchenrecht werden soll, wie der Präsident des Kinderschutzzentrums der Päpstlichen Universität Gregoriana in Rom, P. Hans Zollner SJ, am Mittwoch im Interview mit “Kathpress” sagte.

“Derzeit gibt es keine kirchenrechtliche Handhabe gegen Ortsbischöfe, die ihrer Verantwortlichkeit nicht nachkommen und sexuellen Missbrauch in ihrer Diözese vertuschen”, so Zollner, der Mitglied der Kinderschutzkommission ist. Diese Situation sei aus Sicht der Kommission “unbefriedigend und dringend zu ändern”.

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JOSH DUGGAR CHILLING MOLESTATION CONFESSION IN NEW POLICE REPORT

UNITED STATES
InTouch Weekly

[with copy of the police report]

Josh Duggar confessed to his father Jim Bob Duggar on THREE separate occasions to multiple acts of sexual molestation against his sisters and a family friend, according to a new police report obtained exclusively by In Touch magazine.

The document also makes clear that Josh was 15 years old when he molested his 5-year-old sister and committed at least SEVEN acts of sexual molestation.

The new report is from the Washington County Sheriff’s Office and was obtained by In Touch using the Freedom of Information Act. In Touch broke the story about Josh’s dark past and previously obtained and published a Springdale Police Department report about the molestations, also by using FOIA.

With fewer redactions than the first report, the Washington County Sheriff’s document makes it clear that despite Josh’s chilling confessions the Duggars waited at least 16 months before contacting authorities about the molestations, even though the behavior was continuing and growing worse. During that period they did not get professional counseling for Josh or his victims. Legal experts tell In Touch that Jim Bob and Michelle could have faced six years in prison for their inaction, if the statue of limitations had not expired.

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Missbrauchsanzeige gegen Pfarrer in Sa Pobla zurückgezogen

MALLORCA
Radio Aleman

[The complaint of sexual abuse against the priest in Sa Pobla in Mallorca has been withdrawn. The alleged victim, a 32-year-old Spaniard, announced the withdrawal on Monday morning before the court.]

Die Anzeige wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs gegen den Pfarrer in Sa Pobla auf Mallorca ist zurückgezogen worden. Das mutmaßliche Opfer, ein heute 32 Jahre alter Spanier, gab am Montagmorgen eine entsprechende Erklärung vor dem Gericht in Inca ab. Hier wurden seit der offiziellen Beschwerde am 10. März entsprechene Ermittlungen durchgeführt.

Der Mann hatte angegeben, als Kind zweimal durch den Priester vergewaltigt worden zu sein. Gegenüber spanischen Medien hatte er von Drohungen gesprochen, die der Geistliche ihm gegenüber gemacht habe, falls er zur damaligen Zeit von den Fällen berichte. Zudem hatte er ausgesagt, seit den sexuellen Übergriffen in psychologischer Behandlung zu sein.

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Diözese Mallorca: 30.000 Euro an mögliches Missbrauchsopfer

MALLORCA
Radio Aleman

[The Mallorca diocese paid 30,000 euros to a woman who was abused by a priest.]

Der Bischof von Mallorca hat angekündigt, einer Frau 30.000 Euro an Ausgleichsleistungen zu zahlen. Die Frau hatte den ehemaligen Pfarrer von Can Picafort, Pere Barceló, angezeigt, sie als Kind sexuell missbraucht zu haben. Gegen den Geistlichen läuft derzeit ein juristisches Verfahren.

Wie die Diözese Mallorca am Dienstag mitteilte, sei die Entscheidung in Absprache mit der Klägerin und deren Rechtsbeistand gefallen. Ungeachtet einer möglichen Schuld oder Unschuld des Priesters sehe sich die Diözese in der Pflicht, den “moralischen Schaden” in irgendeiner Form auszugleichen.

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Welche Rolle spielte Pell?

AUSTRALIEN
Domradio

Kurienkardinal George Pell soll vor der australischen Missbrauchskommission zu Vertuschungsvorwürfen Stellung nehmen. Ihm wird die Zahlung von Schweigegeld vorgeworfen. Pell wird zu einer Anhörung in seiner Heimatstadt Ballarat erwartet.

Das teilte die Royal Commission laut australischen Medien am Montag mit. Zuvor hatte ein Mitglied der päpstlichen Kinderschutzkommission den früheren Erzbischof von Sydney und jetzigen Finanzchef des Vatikan als “unhaltbar” bezeichnet. Der Vatikan nahm Pell umgehend in Schutz.

Peter Saunders, eines von zwei Missbrauchsopfern in der von Papst Franziskus eingerichteten Kinderschutzkommission, hatte Pell in einem Fernsehinterview am Sonntag “hart, kaltherzig, fast soziopathisch” genannt. Der Kardinal sei mit einigen teils später zurückgezogenen Leugnungen, von Missbrauchsfällen gewusst zu haben, ein “massiver Stachel im Fleisch” des Papstamtes. Franziskus müsse den Kardinal aus dem Vatikan entfernen. “Ich persönlich denke, dass er unhaltbar ist”, sagte Saunders dem australischen Sender Nine Network.

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Der Schatten des Saubermanns

DEUTSCHLAND
Tages Anzeiger

Papst Franziskus stellt die von ihm initiierte Kurienreform unter das Leitwort «Absolute Transparenz». Jetzt scheint sich das Ideal gegen einen der prominentesten Reformkardinäle zu kehren: gegen George Pell, 73 Jahre alt, ehedem Erzbischof von Sydney, seit Februar 2014 Chef des neuen vatikanischen Wirtschaftssekretariats und damit Finanzminister des Vatikans. Pell ist einer der neun Kardinäle des von Franziskus geschaffenen K9-Rates, der die Kurie transparent und effizient reformieren soll.

Zum Reformprojekt gehört auch die neu eingerichtete Kinderschutzkommission mit der Aufgabe, den Missbrauch Minderjähriger in der Kirche effektiver zu verhindern und die Aufklärung von Delikten zu beschleunigen. Zwei der siebzehn Mitglieder sind selber Missbrauchsopfer. Eines von ihnen, der Brite Peter Saunders, hat nun Pell im australischen Fernsehen bezichtigt, dieser habe als früherer Erzbischof von Melbourne und Sydney zu Fällen von sexuellem Missbrauch durch Priester geschwiegen und Täter gedeckt. Pell sei «kalt, hartherzig, fast soziopathisch» und wegen seiner Rolle im australischen Missbrauchsskandal unhaltbar. Kurzum: Papst Franziskus solle den Kardinal, der stets als Saubermann in Sachen Kirchenmoral auftritt, aus dem Vatikan entfernen.

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Pell a man of integrity: Australian archbishops

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Source: AAP
3 JUN 2015

Australia’s Catholic archbishops have backed Cardinal George Pell as a man of integrity.

The archbishops of Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Hobart and Canberra-Goulburn said they know Cardinal Pell well and while his style can be robust and direct, underneath he has a big heart for people.

“He is a man of integrity who is committed to the truth and to helping others, particularly those who have been hurt or who are struggling,” the joint statement said on Thursday.

Cardinal Pell was one of the first bishops in the world to put in place a comprehensive church response to investigate allegations of sex abuse by Catholic clergy and to provide survivors with redress and counselling, the statement said.

“He has responded to criticisms that have been made of his handling of these matters over the years, acknowledged mistakes frankly, and apologised for them.”

Cardinal Pell has repeatedly rejected claims he tried to bribe one victim to keep quiet, ignored complaints and was involved in moving Australia’s worst pedophile priest, Gerald Ridsdale, to a different parish.

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Irish Church leader distances himself from Cardinal Burke’s comments on marriage referendum

IRELAND
Catholic Herald (UK)

Church in Ireland appeals for new inclusive language

The head of the Irish bishops’ conference has distanced himself from comments made by American Cardinal Raymond Burke concerning Irish voters who backed same-sex marriage.

Reacting to the May 22 poll, in which voters supported the redefinition of marriage by a margin of 62 percent to 38 percent, Cardinal Burke told the Newman Society, Oxford University’s Catholic Society: “It’s just incredible. … Pagans may have tolerated homosexual behaviors, they never dared say this was marriage.”

Asked about the comments during an interview with RTE Radio, Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh, Northern Ireland, president of the bishops’ conference, said yesterday: “I wouldn’t use that language.”

He said: “Throughout the debate and the discussion, we did ask people to try to be respectful and inoffensive in language.”

The archbishop also referred to comments by the Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, that the result represented a “defeat for humanity”.

“I think what Cardinal Parolin was expressing is our deeply held conviction about marriage … he was trying to express the loss that occurred here,” he said.

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Pope Francis swift to accept resignation of the Primate of Belgium

BELGIUM
Catholic Herald (UK)

Archbishop Léonard submitted his letter of resignation on May 6 upon reaching the age of 75

Pope Francis swiftly accepted the resignation of Archbishop André-Joseph Léonard, the Archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels and Primate of Belgium.

As required by canon law, Archbishop Léonard submitted his letter of resignation on May 6 upon reaching the age of 75. The Belgian archdiocese announced on Monday that the Pope had accepted it, despite Archbishop Léonard only being in the position since 2010.

A Belgian court recently ruled that Archbishop Léonard was guilty of misconduct in failing to take action in a sex abuse case, which dated back to when he was Bishop of Namur, from 1991 to 2010. The court ordered him to pay €10,000 to a former Catholic seminarian, Joel Devillet, who was sexually abused as a choirboy in Aubange by a Catholic abbot, Fr Gilbert Hubermont.

The Catholic Church in Belgium has been dogged by abuse allegations for the past five years. In a 2010 pastoral letter, the bishops’ conference asked forgiveness from victims, after Bishop Roger Vangheluwe of Bruges resigned following an admission that he had molested his nephew.

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Louisville High School Teacher Faces Federal Child Porn Charges

KENTUCKY
Lex 18

A Louisville high school teacher accused of engaging in a sexually explicit online relationship with a young teen boy faces federal charges.

Federal prosecutors charged Patrick Newman, 33, with engaging in unlawful online communications with a 13-year-old boy, along with possession of child pornography. Newman teaches at Trinity High School and serves as an assistant football coach.

According to a press release sent out by the Department of Justice on Tuesday, Newman and the boy “used social media applications VINE and KIK for their communications.” …

Trinity High School released the following statement Tuesday afternoon.

“We have been informed that a faculty member has been charged with a crime involving internet pornography. We do not believe this has any relationship to the school. He has been placed on an indefinite leave pending further investigation. We are always concerned for the safety and well-being of young people and we will assist authorities as we can.”

Chief Communications Officer for the Archdiocese of Louisville Cecelia Hart Price said they learned of Newman’s arrest on Tuesday. She released a statement that read in part, “The Archdiocese has not received any reports about Mr. Newman, and there are no indications of any involvement of the schools in this matter. Trinity has placed the teacher on leave pending further investigation. As always, the Archdiocese will cooperate with the authorities as they investigate this situation.”

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Stephen Budd’s victim comforted knowing teacher can’t molest again

FLORIDA
WPTV

[with video]

Brian Entin

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – Stephen Budd’s victims say they can finally move on with their lives knowing he will spend the rest of his life behind bars.

“Mr. Budd no longer has control over me. I can now have control over myself and my future,” one of the victims told the judge after the guilty verdict was read.

The two victims are just weeks away from college and spent the past week testifying about the child molestation they endured in the fourth grade.

They testified Budd molested them under his desk in the Rosarian Academy classroom.

“I believe because I wasn’t able to protect myself or the other victim in the fourth grade, I need to protect others now,” one of the victim’s said.

Prosecutors left the courtroom relieved that Budd was sentenced to three consecutive life terms.

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Legacy of abuse alive and active – HSE adoption report

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

THE catalogue of horrors uncovered about institution after institution entrusted with the care of our most vulnerable infants, children, young girls, and women is so disturbing that it is hard to know how to react to another series of shocking revelations.

Our first, almost understandable, instinct might be to look away, but that would be another betrayal of those vulnerable, abandoned people made victims by a relentless and cruel system, a system run in the main by Catholic religious orders but endorsed by the State and operated in the full, unquestioning knowledge of this society.

Today’s details from a 2012 internal HSE report that an adoption agency — Bessborough Mother and Baby Home in Cork — may have forged death records so children could “be brokered in clandestine adoption arrangements” suggests procedures that would be described as child trafficking today, arrangements that would mean extended jail terms for the organisers and recipients — vendors and purchasers — if they were charged and convicted.

That the report describes infant death rates that were “wholly epidemic” and a “cause for serious consternation” again raises all sorts of questions about how families and society abandoned their daughters and unseen grandchildren to a fate so terrible that it is almost beyond our emotional or psychological ability to comprehend.

Were the people who worked in these institutions evil, deeply ignorant, or just brainwashed? Was the society that did not care enough to impose even light-touch regulation on these appalling establishments so in thrall to the moral diktats of a now discredited theocracy that it dared not intervene? It is hard to imagine our forefathers so supine, so vengeful and cold, so terribly indifferent but the evidence points almost irrefutably in that direction.

The report describes a “cold and lonely environment… characterised by harrowing social, emotional, and physical isolation and institutionalisation” and it is hard not to think that this was not a deliberate act of punishment inflicted by the Catholic version of the Taliban’s infamous moral police.

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SPECIAL INVESTIGATION: Fears over ‘trafficking’ of children to the US

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

Concerns that up to 1,000 children may have been “trafficked” to the US from the Tuam mother and baby home in “a scandal that dwarfs other, more recent issues with the Church and State” were raised by the HSE in 2012.

The warning is contained in an internal note of a teleconference in October 2012 with then assistant director of Children and Family Service Phil Garland and then head of the Medical Intelligence Unit Davida De La Harpe.

It ends with a recommendation that the then health minister be informed with a view to a state inquiry being launched. This was almost two years before revelations of a mass grave at the home forced the Government into launching a state inquiry into all mother and baby homes.

The note relays the concerns raised by the principal social worker for adoption in HSE West who had found “a large archive of photographs, documentation and correspondence relating to children sent for adoption to the USA” and “documentation in relation to discharges and admissions to psychiatric institutions in the Western area”.

It notes there were letters from the Tuam mother and baby home to parents asking for money for the upkeep of their children and notes that the duration of stay for children may have been prolonged by the order for financial reasons.

It also uncovered letters to parents asking for money for the upkeep of some children that had already been discharged or had died. The social worker, “working in her own time and on her own dollar”, had compiled a list of “up to 1,000 names”, but said it was “not clear yet whether all of these relate to the ongoing examination of the Magdalene system, or whether they relate to the adoption of children by parents, possibly in the USA”.

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Adoption campaigners: Bessborough questions need to be answered

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

Adoption rights campaigners have said “serious questions” need to be answered as to why concerns raised by the HSE about Bessborough Mother and Baby Home in 2012 were not acted upon at the time.

A number of adoption groups, human rights bodies, and politicians were reacting to the report, which expressed concerns that death records may have been falsified so children could be “brokered in clandestine adoption arrangements” at home and abroad.

It also revealed that, between 1934 and 1953, a total of 478 children are listed as having died in the institution.

Independent TD Clare Daly said “serious questions” needed to be answered about why the concerns raised by the HSE in 2012 were not acted upon then.

“This horrendous report absolutely vindicates adoption rights campaigners who have consistently called for illegal adoption practises to be fully investigated,” said Ms Daly.

Independent senator and former Children’s Rights Alliance chief executive Jillian van Turnhout questioned why the children’s minister and the Oireachtas were not informed of the report when an inquiry was announced on the issue last year.

“I believe this should have been in the public domain before now,” she said. “We should have known of the existence of this report. We continually show we have not learned any lessons on this issue.”

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SPECIAL INVESTIGATION: Government already knew of baby deaths

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Conall Ó Fátharta
Irish Examiner Reporter

The State has said it was horrified by the revelations about the 796 babies buried at Tuam. However, HSE reports into Tuam and Bessborough mother and baby homes had been prepared for the Government two years previously, writes Conall Ó Fátharta

The latest revelations about the Tuam and Bessborough mother and baby homes raise a number of serious questions as to why a State inquiry into the issue was not launched three years ago.

Material obtained by the Irish Examiner shows that the HSE examined both Tuam and Bessborough as part of the Magdalene laundries inquiry in 2012.

What it uncovered was so shocking that senior HSE figures recommended that the minister be immediately informed so that “a fully fledged, fully resourced forensic investigation and State inquiry” could be launched.

However, it would be almost another two years before an inquiry was announced, on foot of the revelations of historian Catherine Corless.

The HSE material directly addresses infant deaths, and records that the nuns had been soliciting money from parents of children that had been discharged or died. Most shocking of all, concern is expressed that almost 1,000 children may have been trafficked from Tuam for adoption, “possibly in the USA”, noting that “this may prove to be a scandal that dwarfs other, more recent issues with the Church and State”.

A separate report on Bessborough, written in 2012, spoke of “staggering” numbers of children listed as having died at the institution. The author of the report says infant mortality at Bessborough between 1934 and 1953 is “a cause for serious consternation”. Curiously, no deaths were recorded after 1953 but 478 children died in this 19-year period — which works out as one child every fortnight for almost two decades.

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Key figure in families meeting investigated for alleged misuse of funds

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter

Matthew Gambino Catholic News Service | Jun. 2, 2015

PHILADELPHIA
Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia, the head of the Pontifical Council for the Family and lead Vatican organizer of September’s World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia, is under investigation by Italian prosecutors for alleged embezzlement.

Published reports in European media outlets say the investigation stems from 2011 when the archbishop led the diocese of Terni in Italy, and diocesan funds may have been used improperly in a scheme to purchase then resell at a profit a 14th-century Italian castle.

A diocesan financial officer at the time was also the head of an Italian firm that purchased the property, which today remains undeveloped.

Prosecutors named the archbishop as one of the people being investigated. No charges have been filed.

In a statement May 28, Paglia said he has not done anything illegal. “Obviously, I remain at the disposition of the investigating authorities, trusting completely in earthly justice.”

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Accused sex offender named Neville Pell denies he is related to Cardin

AUSTRALIA
The Age

June 3, 2015

Steve Butcher

An alleged child sex offender named Neville George Pell has denied he is related to Cardinal George Pell after a Melbourne court heard he told investigating police they were linked.

In a sworn statement tendered to Melbourne Magistrates Court, a detective said when a colleague asked Mr Pell in February last year if he was related to “George Pell” he replied: “Yes, f—ing hypocrite.”

But after being committed on Wednesday to stand trial on eight charges, Mr Pell, 69, told Fairfax Media outside court he was not related to Cardinal Pell, but had “always referred to George as cousin George because he’s a Pell”.

He pleaded not guilty to the charges, which included two of rape and two of taking part in acts of sexual penetration with a child under 16.

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Top Vatican cardinal trailed by old child abuse scandal from Australia

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Sarah Kaplan June 3

Cardinal George Pell left Sydney two years ago to great fanfare. The longtime Archbishop of Sydney and lauded “defender of the faith down under” had just been appointed chief of the Vatican’s finances — sometimes described as the second most powerful position in Rome. It is the highest an Australian has ever ascended in the Church.

But Pell couldn’t leave behind the child sex abuse scandal that had rocked his hometown, or the hushed accusations that he had a part in it. Those accusations have grown louder and much more public since last month, when an Australian commission began hearings into a notorious pedophilia ring just down the road from where Pell once served as parish priest.

Amid fervent coverage in the Australian press, an accusation that his handling of the issue was “sociopathic” and testimony that Pell ignored warnings about his abusive colleagues and attempted to bribe one victim to stop him from speaking out, Pell has now hired lawyers to fight off attacks from the decades-old scandal he can’t quite shake.

The issue came to a head this Sunday, when Peter Saunders, a British survivor of sexual abuse by a priest who had been specially appointed by Pope Francis to serve on the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors, said that Pell should be removed from his position.

“He has a catalog of denigrating people, of acting with callousness, cold-heartedness, almost sociopathic, I would go as far as to say, this lack of care,” Saunders told the Australian television program 60 Minutes. “… I think it’s critical that he is moved aside — that he is sent back to Australia and that the Pope takes the strongest action against him.”

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Statement by Archbishop Miller of Vancouver …

CANADA
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops

[en francais]

Statement by Archbishop Miller of Vancouver on the closing ceremonies of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission

The closing ceremonies of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission are taking place in Ottawa from May 31 to June 3. The Most Reverend J. Michael Miller, C.S.B., Archbishop of Vancouver, has issued a statement to recall the commitment of the Archdiocese of Vancouver to reconciliation, justice and dialogue with First Nations. In addition to the statement, the Archdiocese of Vancouver is also participating in a number of events marking the end of the Truth and Reconciliation process: Rennie Nahanee, the Archdiocese of Vancouver’s coordinator of First Nations ministry, is taking part in the official closing ceremonies in Ottawa; the Catholic schools in the Archdiocese created “Heart Garden” remembrance projects for residential school children who died, with pupils writing messages on paper hearts to plant in school gardens; and the Archdiocese will take part in an ecumenical service at 10:30 a.m., on June 2, at St. Andrews-Wesley United Church, Vancouver. Mr. Nahanee is also the Chair of the Canadian Catholic Aboriginal Council, which advises the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Link to the Statement

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Editorial: Ottawa should lead the healing

CANADA
Times Colonist

Ceremonies in Ottawa today wrap up five years of work by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, but it’s not the end of the process, just the beginning. And where that process goes depends on actions, not mere words, by Canadians and their governments.

Pressure must be maintained on the federal government, in particular, to ensure the commission’s recommendations are heeded.

The commission, born in part from lawsuits on Vancouver Island, was formed to examine and bring to public consciousness the darkest chapter in Canadian history, when official policy set out to erase aboriginal cultures and languages, to “kill the Indian in the child.” For more than 100 years, First Nations, Inuit and Métis children were removed from their families and sent to government-funded, church-run residential schools, some of them hundreds of kilometres from their homes.

The schools were established, as noted by the commission, “with the purpose to eliminate parental involvement in the spiritual, cultural and intellectual development of aboriginal children.”

The first day of school is often portrayed as a happy moment, but for thousands of aboriginal children, it was terrifying. They were forcibly taken from their families and thrust into a bleak, unfamiliar world, kept like prisoners in residential schools until they were teenagers. Many knew no language but their own, and they were punished, often harshly, if they spoke their own tongue.

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Pell a man of integrity: Aust archbishops

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

AAP

Australia’s Catholic archbishops have backed Cardinal George Pell as a man of integrity.

The archbishops of Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Hobart and Canberra-Goulburn said they know Cardinal Pell well and while his style can be robust and direct, underneath he has a big heart for people.

“He is a man of integrity who is committed to the truth and to helping others, particularly those who have been hurt or who are struggling,” the joint statement said on Thursday.

Cardinal Pell was one of the first bishops in the world to put in place a comprehensive church response to investigate allegations of sex abuse by Catholic clergy and to provide survivors with redress and counselling, the statement said.

“He has responded to criticisms that have been made of his handling of these matters over the years, acknowledged mistakes frankly, and apologised for them.”

Cardinal Pell has repeatedly rejected claims he tried to bribe one victim to keep quiet, ignored complaints and was involved in moving Australia’s worst pedophile priest, Gerald Ridsdale, to a different parish.

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Anglican Church of Canada joins pledge to heed TRC’s call to action

CANADA
Anglican Communion News Service

[Anglican Journal] Acknowledging that their apologies for harms done at Indian residential schools “are not enough,” Anglican, Presbyterian, Roman Catholic and United church leaders on June 2 welcomed the recommendations of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which they say will offer direction to their “continuing commitment to reconciliation” with Indigenous peoples.

“It is clear that Indian Residential Schools, in policy and in practice, were an assault on Indigenous families, culture, language and spiritual traditions, and that great harm was done,” said a joint response read, on behalf of the churches, by Archbishop Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada.

While noting the “good intent and care of many who worked” as staff in these federally funded, church-run schools, the churches admitted that “those harmed were children, vulnerable, far from their families and communities,” and that “the sexual, physical, and emotional abuse they suffered is well-documented.”

The response was made after the TRC released its final report that offered 94 “Calls to Action” on issues around Aboriginal spirituality, education, health, missing residential schools children, justice and language, among others.

The churches—all signatories to the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement—responded to some of the TRC’s recommendations that were directly addressed to them. “We are committed to respect Indigenous spiritual traditions in their own right,” they said, a promise that was met with loud applause.

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Rockhampton Catholic diocese’s new plan to handle child abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By William Rollo

The Catholic Church has outlined a series of new measures to handle allegations of child abuse in central Queensland.

The Rockhampton diocese has been under scrutiny over its response to systemic child abuse at St Joseph’s Orphanage at Neerkol, near Rockhampton, up until the 1970s.

The church has established a hotline for abuse victims in central Queensland, will run regular listening sessions for victims, and a new response coordinator will handle any allegations of abuse in the diocese.

Rockhampton Bishop Michael McCarthy hoped the measures made it easier for victims to come forward.

“While I’m waiting for the royal commission to hand down its recommendations, I think it’s important that we continue to forge ahead and make sure our church is safe for our children,” he said.

Allan Alloway suffered horrific sexual and physical abuse as a resident at the Neerkol orphanage.

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Native residential schools report a welcome first step…

CANADA
Calgary Sun

Native residential schools report a welcome first step but overcoming racism still a big hurdle, say Alberta survivors

BY BILL KAUFMANN, CALGARY SUN

Alberta survivors of Native residential schools say a report on healing that system’s damage is a welcome first step.

But while awareness of the often abusive schools promoted by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s report should help, Rita Nedved, who attended St. Mary’s Residential School near Cardston, said overcoming racism remains a big hurdle.

“It’s going to take both communities working together for that racism to go away, to be accepted for who we are — it’s going to be a long journey,” said Nedved, 72.

She added she knows the report has sparked a backlash against Aboriginals.

“But we’re the ones who carry the pain, we’re the ones who suffered.”

The woman said she was taken from her adoptive family on the Blood Reserve and attended the school operated by the Catholic church for 10 years, where she suffered sexual abuse.

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3 CHICAGO AREA CATHOLIC SCHOOLS KEEP DANGEROUS SECRETS, SEX ABUSE VICTIMS SAY

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

[with video]

By Chuck Goudie and Ann Pistone
Tuesday, June 02, 2015

CHICAGO (WLS) — The ABC7 I-Team looked into claims by nearly 100 alleged victims of sexual abuse in metro Chicago that the archdiocese and some of its schools are keeping dangerous secrets.

The case involves claims of sexual and physical abuse by priests and teachers at three local Catholic high schools. The three high schools have been a part of a Roman Catholic order called the Irish Christian Brothers. Hundreds of men and women accused members of the North American order of sexual abuse.

The order has agreed to pay settlements totaling $16.5 million, but the 100 claimants from the Chicago area are angry because they say the schools they attended as children are keeping important information from the public.

“I can see his face. I can see what happened to me, I can picture the events as clear was if it were yesterday,” said John Ruzic, an alleged victim who attended Brother Rice High School.

At least a dozen brothers and priests who taught at Brother Rice and Leo High Schools in Chicago and St. Laurence High School in Burbank have multiple sexual abuse claims against them, according to this bankruptcy filing by the North American branch of the Irish Christian Brothers.

“When you are a kid, you run frightened, scared and confused. Everything in your world crushes because you don’t know who you are,” Ruzic said.

Ruzic said the pain of his experience at Brother Rice High School forced him to move from Chicago to Las Vegas, never to return.

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George Pell a man of integrity insist Australia bishops

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

TESSA AKERMAN

The Archbishops of Sydney, Brisbane, Perth, Hobart and Canberra-Goulbourn have issued a joint statement in support of Cardinal George Pell.

The Archbishops, as well as the Bishop of Broken Bay Peter Comensoli and Auxiliary Bishop of Sydney Bishop Terence Brady have stated Cardinal Pell is “a man of integrity,” who is committed to the truth.

Cardinal Pell has come under fire following the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing in Ballarat last month.

The inquiry was told Cardinal Pell tried to bribe a victim of pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale to keep quiet and dismissed another abuse victim’s complaint as ridiculous

Abuse survivor Timothy Green told the royal commission he spoke to then Father Pell in 1974 about Christian Brother Edward Dowlan touching boys at St Patrick’s College in Ballarat.

“Father Pell said ‘don’t be ridiculous’ and walked out.”

BISHOPS’ STATEMENT

David Ridsdale, the nephew of Australia’s worst pedophile priest, said that after he told Cardinal Pell in 1993 about the abuse at his uncle’s hands, the Cardinal, a family friend, asked him in a phone call; “I want to know what it will take to keep you quiet.”

The Royal Commission also heard Cardinal Pell was present at a Ballarat diocesan consultors meeting which approved Rdisdale’s transfer from the western Victorian parish of Mortlake where he had offended against children.

The seven Archbishops and Bishops say they know Cardinal Pell well from working with him and that he is committed to the truth and to helping others, particularly those who have been hurt or who are struggling.

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Canada’s dark history of abuse at residential schools

CANADA
Yahoo! News

Al Jazeera

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission released its final report accusing the government of committing “cultural genocide” against indigenous survivors of the government’s brutal residential school system .

It was a damning indictment of Canada’s role in forcing some 154,000 Aboriginal children into those schools between 1874 and 1996.

They were separated from family, culture and their Aboriginal identity, and suffered physical and sexual abuse. It is estimated 6,000 children died while in these schools.

Andrew Wesley, a Cree native from Fort Albany, Ontario was one of the children who attended residential schools. At 69, he remembers his childhood and the schools that he said were meant “to take the Indian out the child”, and to assimilate them into Canada’s “white” mainstream.

Wesley said the root cause of the violence within Aboriginal communities today – domestic abuse, physical and sexual violence, even murder – was caused by the violent history in those schools and the large number of indigenous children abused there.

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June 2, 2015

Report links residential schools with missing and murdered women

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

KATHRYN BLAZE CARLSON
The Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, Jun. 02 2015

All but one of the girls Velma Jackson knew from her days in an Indian residential school are dead. Some of the Blue Quills students died on the streets, some died working in the sex trade, some died from alcohol-fuelled accidents.

This is what Ms. Jackson told the federal Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), which on Tuesday released a landmark report that documents the horrific treatment of native children at the church-run institutions, where physical, emotional and sexual abuse was rampant.

The 388-page report of the commission, headed by Justice Murray Sinclair, drew a connection between the social ills borne out of the residential-school system and the murders and disappearances of indigenous women that plague the community today.

“More research is needed, but the available information suggests a devastating link between the large numbers of murdered and missing Aboriginal women and the many harmful background factors in their lives,” the report says, pointing to poverty, domestic violence and the overrepresentation of natives in the child-welfare system. “The complex interplay of factors – many of which are part of the legacy of residential schools – needs to be examined, as does the lack of success of police forces in solving these crimes against Aboriginal women.”

Among the report’s 94 recommendations is for Ottawa to launch a national inquiry to investigate the violence and its relationship to the “inter-generational legacy of residential schools.” The call comes a year after the RCMP revealed that at least 1,181 native women and girls were killed or went missing between 1980 and 2012.

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Lower Burrell man charged with raping girl

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Chuck Biedka
Tuesday, June 2, 2015

A Lower Burrell man is charged with forcing a teenager to have sex with him.

Daniel Allen Jack, 31, of Toledo Drive, faces rape and seven other charges including sexual assault by an employee of a nonprofit organization.

State police allege Jack met the girl, then 16, at the Amplify Church in Plum, where Jack was serving as a youth group leader and, later, as a youth pastor. He was fired from that position when the allegations against him came to light.

Jack also was a technology employee at Kiski Area School District. Officials there said none of the alleged activity happened at the school or during a school event. Jack is on administrative leave without pay from the school district.

At a special school board hearing Wednesday night, Jack could be fired, said Superintendent John Meighan. The girl was not a student at Kiski.

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Plum Boro youth pastor charged with raping teenage girl

PENNSYLVANIA
WTAE

[with video]

LOWER BURRELL, Pa. —A Plum youth pastor is charged with raping an underage girl he met at Amplify Church and then continuing their relationship.

According to the criminal complaint, the girl, 16, met Daniel Jack, 31, when they spent time together at church functions and fundraising for a trip through the church.

Jack had no comment as he left his arraignment with Judge Cheryl Yakopec in Allegheny Township Tuesday after posting bail, but his lawyer, Robert Mielnicki, spoke to Pittsburgh’s Action News 4.

“Mr. Jack was surprised what the accusations were when he read the complaint for the first time today,” Mielnicki said.

During January, the girl says, Jack began texting her often and it made her uncomfortable because he was attempting to get closer to her outside of church activities. The girl says Jack, who is married, set up a Google account for both of them to email using fake names. He also allegedly bought her a second cellphone and downloaded an app to the phone called “Hangout.”

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Survivors remember days in residential schools

CANADA
Toronto Star

By: Bruce Campion-Smith Ottawa Bureau, Published on Tue Jun 02 2015

The release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s report brought hundreds of residential school survivors to Ottawa, each with their own emotional tale of how that time had affected their life. The Star spoke to a few of them about their time in the residential schools, what the work of commission has meant and how it felt to gather with fellow survivors.

Shishigo Gijig, 61, of Toronto
Attended residential schools in Thunder Bay and Fort Albany, Ont.

“We experienced real bad trauma up there . . . the first part of my life I ended up covering all my pain and hurt with the consumption of alcohol . . . . Then I started going to healing ceremonies, I started learning about myself being a native person and that’s when my life changed.”
Lawrence Houle: “You can see the happiness here today.”
Lawrence Houle: “You can see the happiness here today.”

Lawrence Houle, 76, of Winnipeg
Attended residential school in Manitoba

“When I come to this place, it makes me feel energized. You can see the happiness here today. It’s so powerful. It’s overwhelming to some people because they didn’t know what happiness is . . . most of the time they cried all their lives because of the psychological hurt, the emotional, physical hurt.”
Delores Charles: “These same things are passed down so I took my children out of my community to break that cycle . . .”

Delores Charles, 62, of Georgina Island
Attended Indian day school on Georgina Island

“The alcohol got a hold of a lot of our people. These same things are passed down so I took my children out of my community to break that cycle . . . . We have to make changes and we have to start with ourselves first and our families.”

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Truth and Reconciliation Commission inspired pride and anger

CANADA
Toronto Star

By: Steve Bonspiel

Published on Tue Jun 02 2015

As the Truth and Reconciliation Commission wraps up its five-year mandate this week in Ottawa, I am both proud of the heroes who testified and disappointed in a country that is failing them all over again.
The commission attempted to give some form of healing to those who suffered the most in residential schools, but in a few important ways it fell short.

TRC Justice Murray Sinclair pointed to 2008’s residential school apology in the House of Commons as hollow words. He was right.

With unconstitutional bills like Bill C-51 (the anti-terror bill), land claims moving at a snail’s pace, and many of our communities without proper infrastructure, sewage and running water, Native people have all but given up on healing with Stephen Harper as leader.

And then there was the commission itself. Many who attended the events (myself included) came away with mixed emotions. There was sadness, of course, but also quite a bit of anger that wasn’t only directed toward the priests and nuns who routinely sexually, physically and mentally abused the children.

I came away from it angry at the process.

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Vatican’s embassy calls residential schools report ‘high priority’

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

JASON FEKETE, OTTAWA CITIZEN

The Vatican’s embassy in Ottawa says the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s demands for the Pope to come to Canada to apologize for the Roman Catholic Church’s role in residential schools abuse will be sent to the Pontiff and will be a “high priority.”

However, the Catholic Archbishop of Ottawa, who apologized earlier this week for the abuse at residential schools that were run by the Roman Catholic Church, said calls for the Pope to deliver an apology in Canada is “quite an extraordinary thing to demand.”

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission looking into the decades of abuse of aboriginal children at residential schools across Canada released a damning report Tuesday that includes 94 recommendations, including one that stretches all the way to the Vatican.

The commission is calling for Pope Francis to visit Canada within a year and apologize to survivors, their families and communities “for the Roman Catholic Church’s role in the spiritual, cultural, emotional, physical, and sexual abuse of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis children in Catholic-run residential schools.”

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Quotes about the Truth and Reconciliation Commission report

CANADA
Metro

OTTAWA – Some quotes about the final report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission on native residential schools:

“The residential school experience is one of the darkest, most troubling chapters in our collective history.” — Justice Murray Sinclair, the commission chairman, in his final remarks on the report.


onal and mental abuse.” — Sinclair.

“We have described for you a mountain. We have shown you the path to the top. We call upon you to do the climbing.” — Sinclair.

“We must be mindful that a process that will be as long and complicated as the reconciliation of seven generations of inequity will require stewardship, study and ongoing attention.” — commissioner Marie Wilson.

“To my fellow survivors here in the room, those watching elsewhere, and those who could not join us today, I cannot give enough thanks to you. Thank you for your courage and bravery throughout this whole journey.” — commissioner Chief Wilton Littlechild.

“So, there was a lot of tears. That train I want to call that train of tears.” — survivor Larry Beardy, quoted in the report, telling of a rail journey from his home in Churchill, Man., to an Anglican residential school in Dauphin, Man.

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Premier’s Statement on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report

CANADA
Government of Ontario

June 2, 2015

Office of the Premier

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne released the following statement in response to the release of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s final report summary:

“I would like to thank The Honourable Justice Murray Sinclair and the entire Truth and Reconciliation Commission for assembling what will be Canada’s most comprehensive report on the atrocities committed at residential schools. I would especially like to thank the Survivors who shared their experiences and who have shone a light into one of the darkest chapters of our country’s history.

The Commission has offered us an opportunity to renew our relationship with Aboriginal partners, and challenged us to renew our commitment to live together on this land based on principles of trust, mutual respect and shared benefits. Working with our First Nations, Métis and Inuit partners, it is a challenge the province of Ontario is grateful to accept. Our government will carefully review the report summary and its recommendations, and we look forward to reviewing the final report in its entirety.

Today, I want to reaffirm the Province of Ontario’s commitment to reconciliation, to supporting Survivors and to continuing to build trust with Aboriginal partners.

For reconciliation to succeed, we must also renew our commitment to educating Ontarians on the role that treaties and the residential school legacy play in Canada’s past, present and future. That is why we have worked with Aboriginal and other partners in revising our curriculum to include greater requirements for students to learn about the residential school experience, and will continue to do so from a perspective that honours Survivors, encourages critical thinking, and teaches an understanding of both the short and long-term consequences of residential schools.

Ontario is also working with Aboriginal partners to make everyone in the province aware of our rights and responsibilities as treaty people. This includes the work we have done to distribute treaty maps to every publicly funded school in Ontario, our support for the Anishinabek Nation in developing the “We Are All Treaty People” Teacher’s Kit, and our work to make the “Walk-A-Mile Film Project” available in schools and libraries across the province.

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Churches ‘let off the hook’ by child abuse inquiry

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL
Wednesday 03 June 2015

SURVIVORS of historical child abuse say Scotland’s churches have been “let off the hook” by a national public inquiry set up to investigate the issue.

The inquiry, which is set to get under way later this year, will look at allegations of abuse relating to children in residential care, including independent boarding schools.

But it will not examine allegations where the child was living with its family or an adoptive family, or where the child was attending a “faith-based organisations on a day-to-day basis”.

Survivors are due to meet their legal advisers amid concerns the inquiry will exclude those abused by members of the clergy, but not residing in an institution at the time.

The Scottish Government said the inquiry had to have a “clear remit” if it was to conclude in the four-year time period.

Alan Draper, a spokesman for In Care Abuse Survivors (Incas), said: “We have some major concerns about how the inquiry is going to work in practice. I think they have let the churches off the hook again and that is worrying. What we wanted was any organisation that had a duty of care to be included, and that would have included churches and the Scout organisation. A priest in a parish who abused ten children is not included.”

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Former teacher sentenced to three life terms for sex crimes

FLORIDA
Sun Sentinel

By Marc Freeman
Sun Sentinel

She had the courage two years ago to finally tell West Palm Beach police about the horror of being molested in class by her fourth-grade teacher.

She had the courage last week to testify in court about the abuses she and a classmate suffered as 9-year-olds under the desk of that teacher, Stephen Jerome Budd.

And Tuesday, she had the courage to talk about her pain — and positive outlook — minutes after a jury convicted Budd of five sex crimes, and just before the 53-year-old former Rosarian Academy educator was sentenced to three consecutive life terms in state prison.

So while the now-18-year-old victim has dealt with obsessive-compulsive and eating disorders because of her trauma, she also spoke of the positives in her life.

“I have realized the inner strength in me I never thought I had, the strength I wish I would have had in the fourth grade,” the recent high school graduate told Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Karen Miller. “I now have the comfort of knowing I saved other potential victims of Mr. Budd.”

“When I am up at night or unable to sleep or awoken by nightmares of him, these are the things I am able to think of,” the young woman continued, as Budd, with his head down, sat nearby at a table with his attorney. “Mr. Budd no longer has control over me. I can now have control over myself and my future.”

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Guilty verdict in Stephen Budd trial; sentenced to life

FLORIDA
WPTV

[with video]

Brian Entin

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. – After deliberating all morning a jury reached a verdict Tuesday in the case of a former Rosarian Academy Elementary School teacher accused of child molestation.

The jury found Stephen Budd guilty on all counts of molesting two Rosarian Academy students when they were in the fourth grade.

A short time later he was sentenced to life in prison and classified as a sexual predator.

The girls, now in their late teens, testified during the trial about the sexual abuse that happened in the classroom.

Prosecutors told the jury Monday afternoon that there was no reason the girls would make up the stories.

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Former teacher Stephen Budd guilty of sexual battery, molestation

FLORIDA
Palm Beach Post

UPDATE: Stephen Budd has been found guilty as charged of capital sexual battery and molestation. Budd has been sentenced to prison to serve three consecutive life sentences on the first three charges and 15 years on the final two charges.

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STEPHEN BUDD FOUND GUILTY OF MOLESTING ELEMENTARY STUDENTS AT ROSARIAN ACADEMY

FLORIDA
New Times

BY CHRIS JOSEPH

TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 2015

Stephen Budd, the former Rosarian Academy Elementary School teacher accused of child molestation, has been found guilty on all counts on Tuesday.

Budd, 53, has been sentenced to serve three consecutive life sentences, and another 15 years.

In 2003, Budd was arrested as he was leaving his West Palm Beach apartment after two fourth grade girls came forward and told police that Budd had given then candy in exchange for sexual favors. The acts occurred in 2006 when Budd was the girls’ fourth grade homeroom teacher at Rosarian Academy. The girls, who are teens now, were both 9-years-old at the time.

According to investigators, Budd had given the victims what he deemed as “Budd Bucks,” which was payment in candy, in exchange for the sexual acts. At the time of his arrest, police said that the exchange with the girls had begun at the beginning of the school year and had gone on as a daily routine.

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Vatican abuse commission keeps distance in row over Australian cardinal

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

VATICAN CITY | BY PHILIP PULLELLA

A Vatican commission on sex abuse distanced itself on Tuesday from criticisms lodged by one of its members against an Australian cardinal but urged Church leaders to move swiftly to achieve justice for victims.

Commission member Peter Saunders of Britain said two days ago on Australian television that Cardinal George Pell should be dismissed over allegations he failed to take action to protect children years ago.

Pell, now in charge of reforming the Vatican’s economic departments, has called Saunders’s comments “false”, “misleading” and “outrageous”, and said he would consult legal advisers.

Tuesday’s statement by the 17-member Vatican commission, which is advising the pope on how to root out sex abuse in the Church, said it “has no jurisdiction to comment on individual cases or inquiries”.

In the television program, Saunders said Pell should be “moved aside” and sent back to Australia to address a government inquiry on sexual abuse, which confirmed on Monday that it would ask Pell to testify.

Pell has said he supports the work of the Australian inquiry, where he has appeared twice, and that he is willing to assist in its work.

The Vatican commission said it was “essential that those in positions of authority in the Church respond promptly, transparently and with the clear intent of enabling justice to be achieved”.

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Canada must rebuild trust, and make amends for residential school abuse: Editorial

CANADA
Toronto Star

Vitaline Elsie Jenner is a Survivor who didn’t go quietly. When they came to tear her from her family at Fort Chipewayan in Alberta, she fought to stay with all the fury a terrified child could muster.
Mama, Mama, kâya nakasin! she called out in Cree, the only language she knew. Mom, Mom, don’t leave me!

But like 150,000 other aboriginal children she soon found herself in a notorious residential school — “a world dominated by fear, loneliness, and lack of affection,” as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission put it in its searing summary report into one of Canada’s darkest, most shameful eras, made public on Tuesday.

It was a world in which children were beaten for speaking Cree and other First Nations, Métis and Inuit languages, as Christian teachers tried to “civilize” their young charges. “They took my language. They took it right out of my mouth,” says Rose Dorothy Charlie. “I never spoke it again.” Some children, forcibly uprooted into an alien culture, were known only by numbers. Gilles Petiquay recalls being 95, then 4, then 56. The schooling they received was substandard. All too often the growing children were hungry; milk and meat were luxuries.

“There was no love, there was no feelings, it was just supervisory,” says Jack Anawak, one of 80,000 living survivors. “We would cry like little puppies or dogs, right into the night, until we go to sleep; longing for our families,” says Betsy Annahatak.

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Stephen Harper defends aboriginal affairs record in wake of residential schools report

CANADA
CBC News

By Haydn Watters, CBC News

Prime Minister Stephen Harper spent much of Tuesday’s question period defending his government’s work on aboriginal affairs as the opposition challenged him on the results of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s findings.

But Harper wouldn’t commit to any of the 94 recommendations outlined in the summary report, released Tuesday morning.

Members from the NDP, including Opposition Leader Tom Mulcair, questioned Harper repeatedly as to whether the government would fully adopt the United Nations’ Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, which the commissioners called the “framework for reconciliation.”

The prime minister answered by reiterating his party’s stance on the declaration.

“Canada is one of the very few countries in the world where aboriginal and treaty rights are recognized and that’s one of the reasons why the government accepts the UN declaration as an aspirational document,” he told the Commons.

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Rabbis Can Watch Out For Trouble By Looking Inward

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

Laura Gold
Special To The Jewish Week

Recently, prominent Washington, D.C. Rabbi Barry Freundel received a 6 1/2-year prison sentence for spying on women immersing in the mikveh, the ritual bath. And just last week, The New York Times published an expose on Riverdale Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt’s longstanding habit of bringing teenage boys and young men whom he was mentoring to sit with him naked in a sauna.

With every new rabbinical scandal, after the initial shock and concern and denominational finger-pointing, people tend to breathe a sigh of relief and feel reassured that whatever flaws their rabbi may have, at least he or she isn’t an out-and-out sociopath. The rabbis who make headlines for abusive criminal behavior tell us more about the entwining of psychopathology with power than about the rabbinate, per se.

Still, we shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that all ITAL rabbis are vulnerable to the possibility of misusing their power. For this reason, all rabbis should be encouraged to consider the personal psychological pitfalls that may trip them up. One bad rabbinic apple may not treif up the whole bunch, but it can remind the other apples to look carefully at themselves, not for purposes of preening but for pruning.

As a clinical psychologist and rabbi consulting to clergy across the country, as well as teaching rabbinical students, I find that they often ask me whom to be wary of “out there”: In other words, which congregants pose the greatest danger to the rabbi by way of their excessive neediness or narcissism or other diagnostic warning signals. But rabbis occupy a position that requires turning their scrutiny inward as well. They are professionally remiss if they are not routinely asking themselves: Is there something about myself that I ought to be worried about?

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Former Sharon rabbi pleads not guilty to stealing from synagogue

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By David Abel GLOBE STAFF JUNE 02, 2015

DEDHAM — Barry Starr, the conservative rabbi who stepped down last year from Temple Israel in Sharon, pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges that he borrowed and stole nearly $500,000 from his synagogue and its congregants to buy the silence of a man charged with blackmailing him.

Starr, who appeared in Norfolk Superior Court in Dedham, is accused of paying off Nicholas Zemeitus of Quincy with cash, checks, and banking information as part of a multi-year shakedown.

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Indian Affairs interfered with police investigations of residential school abuse: TRC

CANADA
APTN

APTN National News

Indian Affairs officials covered-up the abuse of children at residential schools and interfered with police investigations, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) says.

TRC Chair Marie Wilson said the commission found that Indian Affairs was involved in an “accepted system of corruption and cover-up” of abuses committed against Indigenous children who were forced to attend Indian residential schools for over a century.

About 150,000 Indigenous children, or seven generations, attended residential schools over the system’s century long existence.

The TRC released a summary of its final report Tuesday in Ottawa following six years of work that saw it travel to 300 communities and hear from 6,750 survivors.

Wilson said throughout the history of residential schools, the federal government, through the Indian Affairs department, actively worked with church-run residential school officials to keep reports of abuses under-wraps despite inquiries from police agencies.

“The churches running the schools were free to hold their own investigations which rarely led to more than seeking out and accepting the denials of accused school officials,” said Wilson, who spoke during the release of the TRC’s report. “We recorded a number of troubling incidents showing failures to take student’s complaints seriously, failure to take action in the rare instances a school official was convicted, failures to report incidents to the local police or the Department of Indian Affairs.”

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What survivors have told the Truth and Reconciliation Commission

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

Alongside its recommendations, The Truth and Reconciliation Commission Tuesday released a compendium of stories from some of the survivors of the residential school system that brutalized thousands of aboriginal Canadians.

Here are some of their voices:

On being removed from their homes and sent to the schools:

“They load(ed) us all up on a bus and took us. And I remember my mom had a really hard time letting us kids go, and she had, she had a really hard time. She begged the priest, and the priest said it was law that we had to go, and if we didn’t go, then my parents would be in trouble.” – Maureen Gloria Johnson, who was taken to Lower Post School in northern British Columbia in 1959.

“I was kidnapped from Port Renfrew’s elementary school when I was around six years old, and this happened right in the elementary schoolyard. And my auntie witnessed this, and another non-native witnessed this … These are two witness trying, saw me fighting, trying to get away with, from the two RCMP officers that threw me in the back seat of the car and drove off with me. And my mom didn’t know where I was for three days, frantically stressed out and worried about where I was, and she finally found out that I was in Kuper Island residential school.” – Howard Stacy Jones.

“We got taken away by a big truck. I can still remember my mom and dad looking at us, and they were really, really sad-looking. My dad’s shoulders were just hunched, and he, to me, looked like his spirit was broken.” – Alma Scott, taken to the Fort Alexander, Man., school when she was five years old.

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Cardinal Pell’s response to victims “almost sociopathic,” says member of pope’s sexual-abuse commission.

AUSTRALIA
Commonweal

Grant Gallicho June 2, 2015

During the May 31 broadcast of Australia’s 60 Minutes, a member of Pope Francis’s sexual-abuse commission described Cardinal George Pell’s treatment of victims as “almost sociopathic.” The 60 Minutes segment focused on Pell’s response to abuse allegations while he ministered in Australia, including testimony alleging that the cardinal tried to buy a victim’s silence, and that he was involved in the decision to move the nation’s most notorious abuser priest, Gerald Ridsdale, between parishes—claims the cardinal denies. Pell, former archbishop of Sydney, was criticized for appearing with Ridsdale at his first trial in 1993 (Ridsdale was eventually convicted of more than one hundred counts of assault). The cardinal has a “catalogue of denials…a catalogue of denigrating people, of acting with callousness,” according to Peter Saunders, selected by Francis to serve on the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. Saunders explained that he based his judgments on conversations with Australian victims. The cardinal’s position as prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy—the office created by Francis to oversee the Vatican’s finances—is “untenable,” Saunders said. “I would go as far to say,” he continued, “that I consider him to be quite a dangerous individual.”

Responses from Pell and from the Vatican spokesman came quickly. Before the program had even aired (after the network released promotional material), Pell issued statements calling Saunders’s comments “false” and “outrageous”—and suggested he might take legal action. (Saunders defended his remarks on June 1, saying they were “not slanderous.”) While acknowledging “the important work Mr. Saunders has done as a survivor of abuse to assist victims, including the establishment of a victims survivors group in the United Kingdom,” the cardinal suggested that Saunders had overstepped his role as a member of the pope’s sexual-abuse commission. The statutes of that body “make it clear that the Commission’s role does not include commenting on individual cases,” according to Pell, “nor does the commission have the capacity to investigate individual cases.”

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