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.

September 20, 2015

Closing arguments slated in priest’s sexual tourism trial

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

The Associated Press

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Closing arguments are scheduled Monday in the trial of a Roman Catholic priest from western Pennsylvania charged with traveling to Honduras to molest poor street children during missionary trips.

Defense attorneys rested their case in Cambria County Court on Friday afternoon without calling the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr., 70, of Windber to the stand.

Maurizio, who has been suspended from Our Lady Queen of Angels Parish in Somerset County, is accused of traveling abroad from 2004 to 2009 to have sex with three young boys — a charge known as sexual tourism — and illegally transferring $8,000 to a charity to help fund the trips.

A defense expert witness on Friday raised questions about investigators’ treatment of alleged abuse victims, suggesting that interviewers can implant ideas that lead to false accusations.

Forensic psychologist Frank Dattilio said social workers, detectives and child advocates occasionally see sexual abuse “where it doesn’t exist … and it can influence how they ask questions.” He acknowledged, however, that it is “very rare” for authorities to deliberately frame questions to elicit a desired answer.

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

Pope Francis expected to surprise in U.S. visit

UNITED STATES
Toledo Blade

BY PETER SMITH
BLOCK NEWS ALLIANCE

Expect the unexpected.

After 18 months of agonizingly meticulous preparation and a crescendo of anticipation, Pope Francis prepares to touch down on Tuesday outside Washington for six days of visits to the high and mighty, the down and out, and the multitudes of biblical proportions.

He’ll be the fourth pope to visit these lands and the first since Pope Benedict in 2008. But Francis’ arrival is more highly anticipated than any since the epic first visit of a charismatic, young Pope John Paul II, in 1979.

The Argentine-born Francis rocketed almost immediately from his relative obscurity as Cardinal Jorge Bergolio upon his election in March, 2013.

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 could compensate victims of ex-Dominican ambassador

CUBA
The Rakyat Post

HAVANA, Sept 20, 2015:

The Vatican on Saturday signaled its willingness to compensate the victims of its former ambassador to the Dominican Republic, who died before going on trial for sexually abusing young boys.

Spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi was asked by a Dominican reporter covering Pope Francis’ trip to Cuba about the possibility of compensating the victims of the late Jozef Wesolowski, who was the Vatican’s ambassador to the Caribbean nation before he was recalled as a result of the scandal.

Lombardi said any possible compensation claims should first be submitted to Dominican authorities, who could evaluate them and forward them church officials if they were justified.

Far from ruling out such claims, Lombardi signaled that the Vatican would consider them: “I don’t have a concrete solution. I should say that if there’s a problem, and if there’s a petition it can be presented to see if there are concrete possibilities to help find a fair solution.”

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.

September 19, 2015

Pope Francis remains weak on child sex abuse

UNITED STATES
The Seattle Times

By Mary Dispenza
Special to The Times

THERE was a time when I would have been among the throngs chanting “Viva la papa” when Pope Francis arrives this week. However, as a survivor of priest sex abuse as a child, along with other survivors, I am experiencing very unsettling feelings about his presence in the United States. The pope symbolizes the dismal past and present response to the darkest era in the Catholic Church — that of sex crimes by clergy and the continued, systematic cover-up by bishops and popes.

Yes, Pope Francis is a breath of fresh air and brings a new tone. Taking care of our Earth is a worthy cause (“On Care for Our Common Home”), and caring for the poor and downtrodden is admirable. Yet, I find that Francis is skirting an elephant that still remains largely unaddressed in the Catholic Church.

In 2014, a Pew Research Center survey gave Pope Francis his lowest marks for not addressing priest sex abuse of children and adults. In the beginning of Pope Francis’ reign in 2013, 70 percent of U.S. Catholics said that addressing the sex-abuse scandal should be “a top priority” for the new pope, far more than said the same about standing up for families and traditional moral values, spreading the Catholic faith or other issues.

To date, Pope Francis hasn’t exposed one cleric who has committed or is concealing sex crimes.

Nor has he ordered any of the world’s 5,100 bishops to do so.

Francis is a powerful leader, able to make change quickly and effectively as he did in cleaning his own house, the Vatican, from corruption and financial mishandling. It really is time to address, once and for all, a major issue that still hangs as a dark cloud above the Catholic Church. Francis could put into effect immediate actions by ousting priests and bishops who cover up sex crimes. I propose five actions to get this done.

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.

Lotto-winning ex-priest charged with sex crime

NEW YORK
The Journal News

Hoa Nguyen and Jane Lerner, jlerner@lohud.com September 19, 2015

A former priest who won more than $1 million in the lottery 30 years ago is being held in Putnam County Jail, charged with a sex crime, records show.

Joseph Faraone, 68, was charged Friday with a second-degree criminal sexual act, a felony. Bail was set at $50,000 cash. State police and the Putnam County District Attorney’s office declined to release any details about the case, citing its sensitive nature.

According to the charges filed, officials are accusing Faraone of engaging in oral or anal sexual conduct with someone younger than 15 years old or with someone incapable of consent due to a mental disability or incapacity.

Faraone, who has since left the priesthood, was associate pastor at Church of St. Denis in Hopewell Junction between 2004 and 2006. Before that he spent 12 years at St. James the Apostle Church in Carmel, 11 years at Church of St. Patrick in Yorktown and nine years at St. Francis of Assisi in Mount Kisco.

The charges do not appear to be associated to his time in the priesthood.

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

Pope faces changing Catholic identity in U.S.

UNITED STATES
MSN

Cathy Lynn Grossman, Religion News Service

A photographer shooting the landscape of American Catholicism today needs a wide-angle lens.

The image would have to stretch to include a Hispanic family at a booming Phoenix church, a disaffected millennial in Seattle who just barely calls herself Catholic, a Mass-every-Sunday senior in Boston and a convert, such as Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush.

Of course, Pope Francis can’t see this entire panorama on a six-day visit, but they can see him. And maybe there will be a “Francis effect” that prompts new levels of pride and engagement in the church.

Studies show that attendance at Mass has been flat for decades. Catholic identity continues to decline among non-Hispanic whites. Meanwhile, immigrant families — Hispanic, Asian and African — keep the overall Roman Catholic population high.

How high, though, depends on how you count.

The Official Catholic Directory counts 68.1 million U.S. Roman Catholics, based on parish reports drawn from the nation’s 195 dioceses. Those reports add up attendance at Mass and participation in the sacraments.

But public surveys that ask adults to name their religious identity find millions more Catholics — including those who have no parish connections.

When the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate ­(CARA), a Catholic research agency, aggregated surveys from several major research bodies, it came up with 81.6 million Catholics.

Whom those numbers represent changes every day.

The entire U.S. religious marketplace is in constant churn, with people leaving their childhood faith for other religions or none at all. Nearly 1 in 4 adults are now “nones” — people who claim no denominational identity.

A new Pew Research survey of U.S. Catholics, released Sept. 2, found that 20% of Americans call themselves Catholic by religion today. That’s a statistically significant drop from nearly one in four (23.9%) in Pew’s original 2007 Religious Landscape Survey.

The Pew Research survey also found that 13% of all Americans call themselves former Catholics — people reared in the church who no longer claim the label. Although the Catholic Church outperforms every major U.S. Protestant denomination in keeping believers within the fold, Pew still calculates that six Catholics leave the church for every one person who chooses to join.

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

Clergy Sex Abuse Survivors Push Pope for Change

MASSACHUSETTS
NECN

[with video]

By Jeff Saperstone

Saturday, Sep 19, 2015
For survivors of clergy sex abuse, Pope Francis’ visit to the U.S. isn’t about celebration. Survivor David O’Regan says he’s heard the pope ask for forgiveness, but he wants to hear more.

“I know it’s going to be difficult for survivors. It’s going to be difficult for myself,” said O’Regan.

“When I see him come to this country, I need to see him find the courage to stand up to his apology and do the things that need to be done.”

O’Regan says that includes disciplining complicit bishops and handing over files on abusive priests.

The Spencer, Massachusetts, man says he was abused by a priest when he was in sixth grade.
Suspected Connecticut Serial Killer to be Charged in 6 Murders

O’Regan now heads up the Worcester-Boston chapter of “SNAP,” the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“I desperately want to hear that he is ready to take action and do the right thing,” he said. “Will I hear that or not, I don’t know.”

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.

ACM Gold affiliates leaving for other brokers – LeapRate Exclusive

SOUTH AFRICA
Leap Rate

LeapRate Exclusive… LeapRate has learned that a number of leading affiliates of South African retail forex broker ACM Gold have lost patience with ACM Gold and its continued regulatory problems, and are shifting their business to other brokers.

ACM continues to have its FSB license listed as ‘provisionally withdrawn‘, now for more than a month, meaning that ACM can continue doing business and executing trades for existing clients, but cannot take on any new clients. And that’s where affiliates and IBs typically make their money – introducing new clients into forex brokers.

ACM’s current troubles are believed to have resulted mainly due to the activity of its largest affiliate, Platinum Forex. Platinum is owned and run by a charismatic and popular pastor named Colin Davids who had his assets seized by South African authorities under suspicion that he was running a pyramid scheme financing his lavish lifestyle.

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.

ACM Gold’s license suspension, the Pyramid Pastor and Seized Assets – LeapRate Exclusive

SOUTH AFRICA
Leap Rate

LeapRate Exclusive…. Sometimes real life is more interesting than even the best written script. And it is hard to get more interesting than this.

LeapRate has learned that the current regulatory troubles being experienced by one of South Africa’s leading retail forex brokers, ACM Gold, stem from the aggressive activity of its largest introducing broker, Platinum Forex.

Certainly something we’ve seen before – an aggressive IB comes up with a supposed can’t-miss method to make money trading Forex for its clients, which it then markets to unsophisticated investors. And then things don’t turn out as planned.

However this story comes with a twist.

Colin DavidsThe IB in this case, Platinum Forex, is owned and run by a very popular South African Pastor, Colin Davids (pictured at right), dubbed the ‘Pyramid’ Pastor by the Sunday Times of South Africa. The charismatic Davids, who has recently written a book entitled The Anti-Grace Gospel and whose wife Charlyn is apparently set to launch a gospel album, is reported to have used his popularity both among his followers and on social media to tout his Forex trading business. And to have used his clients’ money to finance his own very lavish lifestyle.

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.

PA–Victims to leaflet Catholic church

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims to leaflet at Catholic church
They challenge pope to demote bishops
SNAP: “Church officials refuse to do aggressive outreach”
So group asks parishioners to “search for wounded survivors”
“Pope talks about families while abuse crisis devastates them,” SNAP says

What:
On the cusp of Pope Francis’ first-ever visit to the US, as parishioners leave mass, abuse victims will hand out fliers to church goers. The leaflets urge Pennsylvania Catholic officials to

–disclose the names, photos and whereabouts of all proven, admitted or credibly accused predator priests and
–aggressively seek out and help their victims

The fliers also urge Catholic church members to

–question loved ones about these child molesting clerics (“Did any of these clerics ever hurt you?”) and
–beg relatives of victims to come forward get help, call the police, expose predators and protect kids
–prod anyone who has “seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes of cover ups to call law enforcement.”

WHEN
Sunday, Sept. 20 at 11:30 am

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the Cathedral Basilica of SS. Peter and Paul, 18th Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway in Philadelphia

WHO
Five-six adults who were abused as kids by clerics (and their supporters) who belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org)

WHY
While Catholic officials pretend that the continuing clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis is waning, thousands of proven, admitted and credibly accused predator priests are living among unsuspecting neighbors with little or no supervision. (Several hundred are on sex offender registries but most are not. And most have not been defrocked.)

Some, in fact, are still in church jobs:

[Counter Punch]

For the safety of parishioners and the public, SNAP wants Pope Francis to “defrock, demote or discipline” bishops who continue to “protect predators and endanger kids,” especially by “keeping names of child molesting clerics secret and letting them live unsupervised and move elsewhere among unsuspecting families.”

[GlobalPost]

For more than 25 years, SNAP has repeatedly urged bishops to “aggressively seek out and help” the thousands of victims “still trapped in silence, shame and self-blame.” But bishops refuse to do anything but the most minimal moves, the group contends.

So now, SNAP is prodding rank-and-file Catholics to take this step. Specifically, the organization is asking parishioners to circulate lists of publicly accused predator priests in their dioceses and ask loved ones if any of them were hurt by any of the priests.

[BishopAccountability.org]

The Pope’s visit to Philadelphia has been prompted by a conference on family life. SNAP contends that church officials rebuff and attack not only victims of clergy sex crimes but their families as well. The long term effects of clergy sex crimes are often as damaging to parents and siblings as to the victims themselves.

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.

A Subversive Guide to Pope Francis’ US Visit: Philadelphia

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on September 19, 2015 by Betty Clermont

Given the magnitude of the media coverage the next week, this is Pope Francis’ best opportunity to strengthen his geopolitical influence and power.

Please see “A Subversive Guide to Pope Francis’ US Visit: Washington DC and New York.” My purpose is to provide information omitted by the mainstream media.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27 (PHILADELPHIA)

11:00 a.m. Visit to Curran-Fromhold Correctional Facility

Of the three cities the pope is visiting, Philadelphia children have suffered the most from clerical sex abuse. Due to a public outcry, two grand jury investigations were held.

In September 2005, a grand jury announced that Cardinal John Krol was involved with the cover-up of the sexual abuse of children by accused priests throughout the archdiocese, as was his successor, Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua. Both transferred accused priests to other parishes throughout the archdiocese. “The grand jury also demonstrated that nobody could be prosecuted due to Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations and other conditions that protect the archdiocese from being criminally accountable.”

A second grand jury in February, 2011, accused the Philadelphia Archdiocese under Cardinal Rigali of failing to stop the sexual abuse of children more than five years after the first grand jury report documented abuse by more than fifty priests. “The 2011 grand jury report said that as many as 37 priests were credibly accused of sexual abuse or inappropriate behavior toward minors [and] most of those 37 priests remain active in the ministry.”

The 2012 conviction of Msgr. William Lynn followed from the grand jury investigation. Lynn is the only Catholic official in the US to be convicted and sent to prison for covering up abuses by other priests in his charge.

Lynn was moved out of Currna-Fromhold to another state prison after the pope’s itinerary was announced.

Robert Corby, who says he was a victim of child sexual abuse by a priest, “when he heard that Francis was planning to visit inmates at a Philadelphia jail, wrote a letter to the editor suggesting that the pope instead meet with victims of sexual abuse by Philadelphia Archdiocese priests.”

So far, no such meeting is on the pope’s schedule in the US but there is some media speculation because Pope Benedict did so during his US trip. However, given the amount of time needed to carefully screen any victim who gets to meet the pope, this may not happen.

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.

A Subversive Guide to Pope Francis’ US Visit: New York City

NEW YORK
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on September 19, 2015 by Betty Clermont

Given the magnitude of the media coverage the next week, this is Pope Francis’ best opportunity to strengthen his geopolitical influence and power.

Please see “A Subversive Guide to the Pope’s US Visit: Washington DC and Philadelphia.” My purpose is to provide information omitted by the mainstream media.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25 (NEW YORK CITY)

8:30 a.m. Address to the United Nations General Assembly

Pope Francis will address the UNGA when “more than 150 heads-of-state and government of the world are gathering” for the Summit for the Adoption of the Post-2015 Development Agenda. The agenda is centered on “eight globally agreed goals in the areas of poverty alleviation, education, gender equality and empowerment of women, child and maternal health, environmental sustainability, reducing HIV/AIDS and communicable diseases, and building a global partnership for development.”

One can only wonder what type of reception the pope will receive from the delegates who have worked for women’s and children’s human rights and adequate healthcare. Regardless, the pope will use this as another opportunity to talk about women’s equality and empowerment. …

Sex Abuse

The pope has failed to take any of the measures recommended by two UN committees to protect children.

On July 1, 2013, the United Nation’s Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) sent a request to the Holy See for “detailed information on all cases of child sexual abuse committed by members of the clergy, brothers or nun” for the past fifteen years and set November 1 as a deadline for a reply. Additionally, the questionnaire sought to establish whether “perpetrators of sexual crimes” were allowed to remain in contact with children and what legal action was taken against them. The CRC also asked whether reporting of suspected abuse to civil authorities was mandatory and for any incidents where complainants were silenced. The questions were sent as preparation for a public hearing scheduled for January 2014 in Geneva and a November 1 deadline was set. As one of the signatories to the 1989 Convention on the Rights of the Child, the Vatican was fifteen years late in delivering a report describing whether it had acted to “protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence” as the convention requires.

The deadline came and went. Pope Francis responded to the CRC on December 4 by stating that it was not the practice of his government to “disclose information on specific cases unless requested to do so by another country as part of legal proceedings” and “that the Vatican can provide information only about known and alleged child sex crimes that have happened on Vatican property.”

BishopAccountability.org, a group dedicated to documenting the Catholic sex abuse crisis, noted five significant moments from the January 2014 hearing:

• For the first time, the Vatican had to admit publicly that it still does not require the reporting of child sex crimes to civil authorities.
• Nor does it take this step when priests are defrocked.
• The Holy See still refused to provide the data requested on July 1.
• The Vatican believes that it is the obligation of the individual perpetrator, not the Church, to compensate victims.
• Religious orders, which comprise one third to one half of the world’s Catholic clerics, still are not being compelled by the Holy See to create abuse policies.

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.

A Subversive Guide to Pope Francis’ US Visit: Washington DC

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on September 19, 2015 by Betty Clermont

Given the magnitude of the media coverage the next week, this is the BIG EVENT for this pontificate. Ever since popes crowned the Holy Roman emperors, with few exceptions they have sought geopolitical influence and power.

Pope Francis “is due to meet President Obama and the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon. [He] will be going with a particularly dense international agenda: the Holy See, after all, is playing a frontline role in many of the planet’s most burning issues.”

“The Pope’s grip on the world stage means his pastoral actions will have widespread political implications. This prediction … appears in the White House and State Department’s documents.”

“The first time a pontiff will be addressing Congress rivals a presidential inauguration and State of the Union wrapped into one.”

“The improbability of a pope standing before a joint meeting of Congress comes in an era of wider acceptance of the Catholic faith as it intersects with public life and US politics, and indicates a comfort level between the two that wouldn’t have been imaginable several decades ago.”

“Some Jesuits say quietly that Bergoglio, despite being a Jesuit, is closer ideologically to Opus Dei … Bergoglio’s ‘personal, undisputed, austerity has always lived with a determined and sustained pursuit of power, first in his congregation, then in Argentina and now the universal Church. Bergoglio is a strategist and a politician,’” noted Oscar Chamber, professor at the Salesian Center for Studies in Buenos Aires and Franciscan Theological Institute. (Opus Dei is a secret society of multinational financiers)

Pope Francis’ favorable rating among liberals has fallen 14 percentage points from 82 to 68 percent according to a recent poll. I would like to think that the other third still believes in “the collapse of the American media into utter and complete substanceless” as regards its reporting on the pope and/or remembers that two and half years ago most Americans understood that Catholic prelates carried water for the Republican Party and other plutocrats around the world, and that these same prelates elected Bergoglio as pope.

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

Pope Francis is coming, he’s just not coming here.

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

09/18/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

If you have a ‘google alert’ set to tell you when news is posted about the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, your email inbox has likely been filling up quickly this week. With Pope Francis set to arrive in the United States next Tuesday, it seems as though every major media outlet in the country is running a story about the state of the Catholic Church in America, and no such story is complete without a reference to the place that has become, defacto, the Church’s current ‘ground zero’. In addition to the widely-circulated stories of the AP and Reuters, national and international TV stations have been sending crews to talk to people in Saint Paul and Minneapolis about the state of the church, and specifically about the bankruptcy, resignations, and sexual abuse by clergy.

With every news organization from Al Jazeera to PBS News Hour sending reporters and camera crews, producers and techinical staff, there is one conspiscious absence among the hubbub- Pope Francis. The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis might be ‘ground zero’ in terms of the public’s perception of the Church, but we clearly remain flyover land in the view of those orchestrating the Pope’s visit to the United States.

Not that I blame them. Anyone with even a smidgeon of an understanding of how public relations works can understand that no good (in the PR sense) could come from Pope Francis visiting our beleagured Archdiocese. What has happened here (and continues to happen) is too obviously a reminder of Francis’s failures rather than his successes, and a visit would point out all the things that the Catholic Church is hoping will be forgotten once American Catholics are able to bask in the glow that is Francis himself. Why draw attention to the fact that we had abusive clergy in ministry for more than twelve years following the adoption of the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People? Why higlight our declining attendance at Mass and a similar decline in financial contributions? Why raise questions as to whether the Archdiocese’s strategy in bankruptcy is consistent with a ‘victims first’ mentality? And why, oh why, give people a reason to dwell on the fact that allowing bishops to resign (an ecclesiatical form of ‘honorable discharge’) undercuts the accountability that Francis has promised?

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.

Police: Former Minister Arrested for Stealing Medication from Church Members

ARKANSAS
NWA Homepage

WASHINGTON COUNTY, AR

According to the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, former Tontitown minister and music worship leader, Joshua Stanbery, was arrested after he admitted to stealing medication from several church members’ homes.

According to police records, Stanbery was employed by Cross Pointe Community Church in Tonititown.

A church member who reported their pain medication stolen told police the church later discovered that approximately 40 families may have been targeted by Stanbery.

The report states that Stanbery admitted to the pastor of the church, Larry Petton, that he had stolen the drugs.

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

MEDIA RELEASE – SEPTEMBER 18-19, 2015 – PAPAL VISIT EVENT

NEW YORK
Road to Recovery

PAPAL VISIT TO THE UNITED STATES SHOULD INCLUDE TRANSPARENCY REGARDING SEXUAL ABUSE OF CHILDREN

What
A press conference and distribution of flyers alerting Catholics, the media, and general public that Pope Francis has not made clergy sexual abuse and TRANSPARENCY about it a focus of his visit to the United States beginning September 22, 2015

When
Sunday, September 20, 2015 from 10:00 am until Noon

Where
On the public sidewalk in front of St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Fifth Avenue between 50th and 51st Streets, Manhattan, New York City

Who
Victim/survivors of sexual abuse and members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, including its co-founder and President, Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., who was sexually abused as a young adult by religious brothers (including Irish Christian Brother John P. O’Brien who later became an Archdiocese of New York priest, and Irish Christian Brother Joseph Mark Clark, his novice master). Robert Hoatson was abused in the Archdiocese of New York and in other dioceses and counties of the State of New York and was found to be credible by the Irish Christian Brothers

Why
Victim/survivors of sexual abuse by members of the Catholic hierarchy, clergy, religious life, and other church personnel are not able to share in the excitement of the visit of Pope Francis because they have yet to receive the TRUTH about their abusers and enablers. The Catholic Church is still not TRANSPARENT about sexual abuse of children, teenagers and vulnerable adults, and Pope Francis himself has not yet acted definitively regarding abusers who are still in ministry and not removed from the clerical or religious states, bishops who have covered up, and how victim/survivors will be given the resources and services they need to recover. Demonstrators will call on Catholics to demand of Pope Francis that he:

1) Admit his own lack of transparency about what he knew about cases of sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires, Argentina;

2) Publicly release the names of all priests, deacons, religious brothers and nuns, and all other employees of the Catholic Church who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of children;

3) Publicly release the names of the thousands of bishops who have allowed the sexual abuse of innocent children to occur; and,

4) Meet with victim/survivors to discuss the clergy sexual abuse crisis, the healing process, and programs that address the safety of children.

Contacts
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D., Road to Recovery, Inc., Livingston, NJ 07039 – 862-368-2800
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, Boston, MA – 617-523-6250

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

Judge dismisses journalist Laura Robinson’s defamation suit against John Furlong

CANADA
The Georgia Straight

by Martin Dunphy on September 18th, 2015

A defamation suit brought by journalist Laura Robinson against Vancouver 2010 Olympics CEO John Furlong has been dismissed by the Supreme Court of B.C.

In a 97-page reasons for judgement released today (September 18), Justice Catherine Wedge wrote that Furlong’s public statements in the wake of a 2012 Georgia Straight story written about his past as a teacher in northern B.C. were “occasions of qualified privilege” that were not “actuated by malice”.

“In the result,” Wedge wrote, “Mr. Furlong’s defence of qualified privilege is a full answer to Ms. Robinson’s defamation claim.”

Broadly, the defence of qualified privilege allows for statements that may be defamatory to be uttered or published as long as they are in the public interest or for the public benefit and they are made without malice.

The 2012 story contained details about Furlong’s past as a Christian missionary teaching First Nations children in Burns Lake, B.C., decades ago, details that were omitted from his official biography. The story contained allegations of physical abuse committed by Furlong at the time.

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.

Journalist Robinson Loses Defamation Suit against John Furlong

CANADA
The Tyee

By Bob Mackin, Today, TheTyee.ca

Laura Robinson on the ruling: ‘I fought this case through trial because I believe that freedom of speech and freedom of the press are vital to an open and democratic society.’

A journalist’s claim that former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong defamed her after she reported allegations against him in a 2012 news story has been struck down.

After freelancer Laura Robinson’s story was published, Furlong alleged in public statements that she was a bad reporter and an activist with a personal vendetta. In her Jan. 2014 defamation lawsuit, Robinson denied those allegations and claimed Furlong was more interested in discrediting her than protecting his own reputation.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Wedge ruled on Sept. 18 that Furlong’s statements were within the law and not motivated by malice.

Wedge wrote that the central issue of the two-week defamation trial, which concluded in June, was whether Robinson attacked Furlong’s character and conduct in such a way that he was entitled to strike back with the words that he used.

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

Former Vancouver Olympics boss Furlong wins defamation case filed by journalist

CANADA
Hamilton Spectator

By Laura Kane

VANCOUVER — A journalist’s articles about former Vancouver Olympics boss John Furlong were an attack on his reputation, a judge has ruled in a scathing decision tossing her defamation lawsuit.

Laura Robinson reported allegations by eight First Nations people that Furlong abused them more than 40 years ago without verifying their stories or ensuring they weren’t contaminating each others’ memories, the judge found.

“Ms. Robinson’s publications concerning Mr. Furlong cannot be fairly characterized as the reporting of other persons’ allegations against him,” B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Wedge wrote in a decision released Friday.

“Rather, the publications constitute an attack by Ms. Robinson on Mr. Furlong’s character, conduct and credibility.”

Robinson had accused Furlong of publicly portraying her as unethical, heartless and cruel in an attempt to discredit her 2012 article published in the Georgia Straight.

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.

Journalist loses defamation suit against John Furlong

CANADA
CTV

Laura Kane, The Canadian Press
Published Friday, September 18, 2015

VANCOUVER — Former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong did not defame a freelance journalist who reported on allegations he abused First Nations students, a judge ruled Friday.
British Columbia Supreme Court Justice Catherine Wedge has released her written decision in a defamation lawsuit filed by freelance journalist Laura Robinson.

Wedge said she found no evidence that Furlong was motivated by malice and accepted his defence of qualified privilege, meaning he had the right to defend his reputation.

She said the issue in the legal action was whether Furlong was entitled to respond in the way he did to Robinson’s published stories.

The woman’s articles could not be fairly characterized as simply reporting on another persons’ allegations against Furlong, her ruling stated.

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.

Furlong wins case against journalist after three-year libel battle

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

SUNNY DHILLON
VANCOUVER — The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Sep. 18, 2015

Nearly three years after an article alleged former Vancouver Olympics CEO John Furlong abused his students when he was a gym teacher – casting a dark cloud over a man who had been much-lauded for his work leading the 2010 Games – a judge has handed him a significant victory, dismissing a defamation lawsuit against him.

B.C. Supreme Court on Friday ruled against freelance journalist Laura Robinson, who sued Mr. Furlong for his response to an article she wrote in the weekly newspaper Georgia Straight. The article accused Mr. Furlong of physically abusing students when he was an instructor at Immaculata Roman Catholic Elementary School in Burns Lake, B.C., in 1969-70. Ms. Robinson published a second article that same day in the Anishinabek News, in which she wrote one student had gone to the RCMP to say she had been sexually assaulted.

Justice Catherine Wedge, in a 97-page ruling, said Mr. Furlong’s criticism of Ms. Robinson’s work and suggestion she had a vendetta against him was covered by the defence of qualified privilege. The judge said she was satisfied Mr. Furlong was not motivated by malice and Ms. Robinson’s work constituted an attack on Mr. Furlong’s “character, conduct and credibility.”

Friday’s dismissal appears to bring an end to a chapter that has enveloped Mr. Furlong’s life and crushed his once-lucrative public-speaking career. The lawsuit was the fourth filed against him – three former students earlier alleged sexual abuse, though two of the cases were dismissed and one was dropped. Mr. Furlong was not charged criminally and vehemently denied wrongdoing throughout.

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.

John Furlong absolved, but reputation will take time to mend

CANADA
Calgary Herald

MATTHEW ROBINSON, VANCOUVER SUN 09.17.2015

John Furlong, absolved this week of wrongdoing in a defamation suit, can mend his reputation, but there will always be an asterisk beside his name, says a crisis management expert.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Wedge ruled Friday that Furlong, the former Vancouver Olympics CEO, did not defame journalist Laura Robinson, who had reported allegations he abused First Nations students in Northern B.C.

While the decision wiped clear Furlong’s slate of legal battles, it will not erase the digital record of accusations and allegations that have damaged his reputation, said Ken Coach, a crisis management specialist.

“Anyone can rebrand and bounce back,” Coach said in an interview. “It’s almost the old story of salvation. There’s a certain amount of appeal in that. Anyone can bounce back, but the difficulty nowadays is that it stays on Google forever.”

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

Editorial: Five essential American issues for Pope Francis

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

Editorial

With actions and words, Pope Francis has given new heart to the Catholic Church. He is a pope in touch with the trials and tribulations of ordinary people.

From the promise Pope Francis made at his installation Mass in 2013, when he pledged to serve “the poorest, the weakest, the least important,” to his open-minded and powerful sensibility on gay men and women, when he asked just months into his papacy, “Who am I to judge,” he has exhibited great compassion and charity.

As the pope traverses the globe, such gestures resonate not only with relatively more progressive Catholics but also the world. Eager, large crowds are expected to greet him on his U.S. visit. It begins Tuesday with his arrival at the Joint Base Andrews military facility in Maryland, and includes stops at the White House, Capitol, New York and Philadelphia.

Only 2 ½ years into papacy, it is too early to know what kind of impact Francis will have on church doctrine. But there is no denying he is shifting the church’s focus to be more inclusive of everyday people.

We see it in Chicago with his choice to lead the Chicago archdiocese, Archbishop Blase Cupich, who gave a forceful endorsement of working people Thursday in a speech at a union hall on the West Side. Cupich will join the pope on his U.S. visit.

This new direction is vital for the church in the U.S., where 52 percent of U.S. adults who were raised Catholic have left the church at some point, according to Pew Research. Most have not returned.

A pope full of surprises has been a breath of fresh air, and as he visits our country we hope he keeps at the forefront these issues:

Sexual abuse by priests

The pope has apologized to victims of sexual abuse by priests and created a commission of experts that includes two survivors of abuse to advise the Vatican on protecting children from pedophile priests and counseling victims. He accepted the commission’s recommendation for a Vatican tribunal to prosecute bishops who failed to remove abusive priests. Yet, the process is bureaucratic and frustratingly slow.

“The commission gives the impression that with more time and study experts can give recommendations,” Barbara Blaine, president of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, told us. “That’s not making children safer.”

Blaine’s group wants all case files at the Vatican turned over to law enforcement and swift punishment for bishops who engaged in cover-ups.

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.

Open the Vatican’s Holocaust-era archives

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Gerald Posner
September 18

Gerald Posner’s book “God’s Bankers: A History of Money and Power at the Vatican” was published in February.

Pope Francis begins his much-anticipated visit to the United States this week with popularity ratings that are the envy of every U.S. politician. He also arrives with a well-deserved reputation as a reformer. During his more than two years as pope, he has supercharged a wide-ranging overhaul of the scandal-plagued Institute for the Works of Religion, or the Vatican Bank. Since its World War II creation, the bank had often served as an offshore haven for tax evaders and money launderers and frustrated six of Francis’s predecessors. Little wonder that public figures of all faiths are clamoring to share the spotlight with this pope. From a meeting with the president to an unprecedented address to a joint session of Congress, plenty of politicians hope to bask in the “Francis effect.”

Francis’s visit will be a missed opportunity, however, if America’s leaders and many presidential aspirants don’t push to resolve a long-standing impasse between the United States and the Vatican over the church’s steadfast refusal to open all its Holocaust-era archives.

Those sealed records may help settle debate about whether the wartime pope, Pius XII, could have done more to prevent the Holocaust. They could also resolve questions about the extent to which the Vatican did business with the Third Reich, particularly whether it invested in German and Italian insurance companies that earned outsize profits by escheating the life insurance policies of Jews sent to the death camps.

Although Francis is a progressive pope, he is unlikely to act unless U.S. leaders forcefully push the issue of historical transparency. I know this firsthand, since my own numerous appeals to the Vatican for access to the archives, including a personal one to Pope Francis, have gone unanswered.

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.

Chile: Arzobispo pidió perdón por proteger a sacerdote denunciado por abusos sexuales

CHILE
Peru21

[The Archbishop of Santiago – Ricardo Ezzati – apologized for the controversy arising from the emergence of e-mails which showed the Chilean Church had tried to cover-up for a priest accused of sexual abuse. He spoke during the Te Deum for the national holidays in Chile.]

El arzobispo de Santiago (Chile), Ricardo Ezzati, pidió perdón ante la polémica surgida por la aparición de correos electrónicos en los que se comprobaría que la Iglesia chilena habría encubierto a un sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual.

Ezzati se pronunció durante el tedeum por las fiestas patrias de Chile, realizado en la Catedral de Santiago, al que asistió la presidenta Michelle Bachelet.

Ezzati fue duramente criticado tras la publicación en un medio local de mensajes en los que el cardenal Francisco Errázuriz entrega instrucciones de cómo encubrir el caso del sacerdote Fernando Karadima, acusado en el 2010 por haber abusado sexualmente de cinco menores en una parroquia de un exclusivo barrio de Santiago.

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.

Married church minister ‘ran bottom spanking cult’

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

A church minister used the Bible to justify spanking vulnerable women on their bare bottoms to satisfy his own sexual desires, a court heard today.

Howard Curtis, 72, former senior minister of the Coulsdon Christian Fellowship, south London, allegedly ran a “cult” where grown women were persuaded to strip naked so he could spank them over his knee for his own pleasure.

Married Curtis and his “inner circle” used “unorthodox” teachings to instill discipline and drive out evil spirits in both women and children who had come to him for help, it is said.

His abuse of their trust continued as he moved “from one woman to another” and his confidence grew, Croydon Crown Court heard.

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.

Spanks be to God

UNITED KINGDOM
The Sun

A CHURCH minister ordered women to strip naked and spanked them to “cast out evil spirits”, a court heard yesterday.

Howard Curtis, 72, is accused of targeting vulnerable women who came to him for counselling over depression and domestic abuse.

But a jury was told that instead of helping them, he forced them to take part in bizarre rituals for his own sexual gratification.

Prosecutor Jane Osborne said: “He would conduct something known as deliverance ministry — said to be casting out evil spirits.

“This would be done by striking flesh with a bare hand.

“He would spank them over their bare bottoms, getting them to strip naked during the counselling under the guise of helping them get over their former abuse.”

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

Lincoln Diocese to take part in annual sex abuse audit

NEBRASKA
Lincoln Journal Star

By Erin Andersen | Lincoln Journal Star

For the first time in 13 years, Lincoln’s Catholic Diocese will participate in the next sex abuse audit conducted by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops — thereby ending its unflattering reign as the only diocese in the nation not to take part.

Bishop James D. Conley announced his decision to participate in the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People annual audit of the 195 U.S. dioceses and eparchies, in his Sept. 11 column for the Southern Register, the Lincoln Diocese newspaper.

The decision reverses a longstanding and controversial position of Conley’s predecessor Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz, who since 2003 refused to participate in the audit that looks at sex abuse allegations, investigations and actions in the church.

The Lincoln Diocese will take part in the upcoming audit cycle looking at 2015 (being released in 2016) and then review whether it will continue participating.

The USCCB began the annual audit in 2002, in response to increasing allegations of longtime sexual abuse of children by clergy and subsequent efforts to keep matters quiet. The Lincoln Diocese took part in the audit that first year, but has declined to participate ever since. It is one of six church districts not taking part — the other five are small eparchies (dioceses unique to certain ethnicities).

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.

Defense rests, but former Somerset County priest accused of sex abuse not called to testify

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Paul Peirce
Saturday, Sept. 19, 2015

A federal jury in Johnstown will begin deliberations Monday in the case of a Somerset County priest accused of sexually assaulting boys in a Honduran orphanage without hearing testimony from the priest.

Attorneys for the Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 70, of Windber abruptly rested their defense Friday afternoon without calling the former pastor of Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Central City to the witness stand to testify on his behalf.

Maurizio is accused of traveling to Central America on mission trips for his self-run nonprofit, Humanitarian Interfaith Ministries, from 2004 to 2009 to have sex with orphaned boys.

Federal officials said Maurizio gave boys at the ProNino orphanage cash and candy in exchange for watching them shower, having sex or fondling them.

Maurizio is charged with four counts of engaging in illicit conduct in foreign places, one count of child pornography and three counts of transporting, transmitting or transferring funds into or out of the United States with the intent to promote unlawful activity.

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

Clergy Abuse Survivor Responds to Pope Francis Invitation to Address Congress

MASSACHUSETTS
Press Release Rocket

Survivors Voice Co-Founder & Child Abuse Advocate Gary Bergeron says inviting the pope to address congress is simply wrong.

Boston Massachusetts (PRWEB) September 19, 2015

The following is a statement released by Survivors Voice Co-Founder Gary Bergeron on the invitation extended to Pope Francis to address the US Congress:

“The term ‘History will be the judge’ is often used when speaking of public officials. The public and quite often members of the press continue to display what seems, at times, to be an almost a giddy admiration of Pope Francis as he begins his journey to the United States. As an adult survivor of childhood sexual abuse, I would like the public to reflect on the recent history of the institution this man heads.

“The United Nations investigated the Vatican and concluded that ‘The Holy See has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which has led to the continuation of the abuse by and the impunity of the perpetrators’ This is not ancient history, or decade old history. This report was released in 2014.

“Justice, is the term most victims of crime use when asked what they seek. For adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse, the term ‘Justice’ is an elusive term rarely obtainable. One of the major road blocks continues to be the statute of limitations surrounding childhood sexual assault.

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.

September 18, 2015

South America has become a safe haven for the Catholic Church’s alleged child molesters. The Vatican has no comment.

MONTERREY (MEXICO)
"The World," PRI.org [Boston MA]

September 18, 2015

By Will Carless

Read original article

Jennifer’s memories were scattered and fleeting. They came suddenly, triggered by a smell or a glimpse of light dappled through stained glass. The aroma of freshly baked mince pies repulsed her nostrils. Scented candles, like the ones in the small San Antonio, Texas church she attended as an elementary school girl, made her gag with disgust.

Jennifer’s mother couldn’t understand these abrupt fits of revulsion, or the angry outbursts that accompanied them. For years, her daughter had been slipping into chaos, flunking classes, running with a bad crowd. The once happy-go-lucky child had changed beyond all recognition.

Then, one day, years after her life began unraveling, it all came pouring out.

“She finally came and told me that he had raped her,” the girl’s mother told GlobalPost. Therapy had dragged up Jennifer’s memories: a sudden blacking out, possibly from a drug she had been slipped, then dizzily regaining consciousness on a bed in the rectory. “I remember when I came to, it was just him and me and he was on top of me and I remember that stained-glass window and he did it in front of the Blessed Sacrament,” Jennifer told her mother.

*****

Jennifer — who is identified only by her first name because she still suffers trauma from the alleged incident — is by no means the only parishioner to accuse Father Federico Fernandez Baeza of abuse.

Fernandez arrived in San Antonio in the early 1980s. By 1983, prosecutors had charged him with exposing himself to two young girls in a local swimming pool. A year later, he had begun ritually abusing and raping two young boys in his care, according to a 1988 lawsuit filed by a local family. The abuse continued for two years, the lawsuit claimed.

The priest was never convicted of a crime. Instead the church negotiated a large cash settlement, and Fernandez promptly relocated to Colombia, where he continued working for the Catholic Church. In May, GlobalPost traced him to the picturesque seaside city of Cartagena. He’s currently a senior administrator and priest at a prestigious Catholic university, enjoying all the privilege, respect and unfettered access to young people that comes with being a member of the clergy.

*****

Fernandez is just one of scores of Catholic priests who have been accused of abusing children in the United States and Europe, but who have avoided accountability simply by moving to a less-developed country.

Even as Pope Francis has touted reform of the Vatican’s safeguards against child abuse, GlobalPost has found that the Catholic Church has allowed allegedly abusive priests to slip off to parts of the world where they would face less scrutiny from prosecutors and the media.

In a yearlong investigation, we tracked down and confronted five such priests. All were able to continue working for the church despite serious accusations against them. When we found them, all but one continued to lead Mass, mostly in remote, poor communities in South America.

Some of these men faced criminal investigations, but went abroad without charges being brought against them. One of the priests admitted to GlobalPost that he had molested a 13-year-old boy, and acknowledged that he can never work again in the US. He continues to preach in a small Peruvian fishing village. Another is currently under investigation by authorities in Brazil for a string of alleged molestations, including accusations in the poor neighborhoods where for two decades he ran a home for street children — with the support of the Catholic Church.

GlobalPost interviewed one diocese leader in these communities, but was otherwise not granted interviews with local church officials. And despite protracted efforts and discussions with church press officers, neither the Vatican nor the chairman of a new papal commission set up specifically to tackle church child abuse would speak with us.

For advocates and attorneys who have studied abusive Catholic priests for decades, the flight of these fathers overseas represents just the latest chapter in a long story of deceit, collusion and church-sponsored impunity for child abusers.

“As developed countries find it tougher to keep predator priests on the job, bishops are increasingly moving them to the developing world where there’s less vigorous law enforcement, less independent media and a greater power differential between priests and parishioners,” said David Clohessy, national director and spokesman for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP. “This is massive, and my suspicion is that it’s becoming more and more pronounced.”

“I’m a pedophile, in the real sense”

The boy runs along the trash-strewn potholed dirt street, his long copper-colored hair flowing behind him. Father Jan Van Dael, 76, reaches out to touch his arm, moving close.

“He reminds me of a boy who was in my house in Rio de Janeiro,” Van Dael says, referring to the orphanage he used to run in the 1980s.

The boy wriggles free and lines up to fill his pot from the containers of soup that Van Dael and his volunteers have brought to this small slum just outside the rough-and-tumble city of Caucaia, in Brazil’s northeast.

Van Dael, an avuncular, slightly doddery Belgian priest, seems deeply affectionate toward pre-adolescent boys. He loves to take their photographs. He reaches for children he barely knows, like a father hungry for attention.

Back in the late 1980s, Van Dael moved from Europe to Brazil, first settling in Rio de Janeiro. After a falling out with the local diocese (Van Dael says church officials objected to his working with poor street children whom they deemed criminals), the Belgian was asked to leave, and ended up in windswept Caucaia, a few miles from the crime-ridden city of Fortaleza.

Taking advantage of Brazil’s extraordinary exchange rates at the time, which greatly favored the US dollar and European currencies, the “gringo priest” set up a new orphanage for abandoned and troubled street kids.

He called it “Esperança da Criança,” or Children’s Hope.

But the home’s whitewashed walls — which Van Dael hung with dozens of photographs he took of young boys — appear to have borne witness to plenty of misery, along with any hope.

According to Brazilian prosecutors, Van Dael is currently under investigation by both the Belgian and Brazilian federal authorities, an inquiry that adds to a litany of child abuse accusations against Van Dael on two continents.

Last year, a Dutch television station interviewed two men who claimed Van Dael fondled them at church and at a Catholic summer camp in Belgium in the early 1970s. A federal prosecutor in Fortaleza told the station that there had also been several complaints of sexual abuse against Van Dael over the last 10 years.

In 2011, two former interns at Van Dael’s orphanage told the Belgian media that children there said the priest had abused them. And the head of a local government child protection agency in Caucaia told GlobalPost he had received a complaint about Van Dael back in 2008. The complaint languished, the official said, because the agency didn’t have the staff or resources to investigate it.

Van Dael has been suspected of pedophilia for years. Meanwhile, his career as a priest has flourished in the Archdiocese of Fortaleza.

His services are in constant demand. He said he sometimes celebrates Mass six times a weekend in the poor neighborhoods of Caucaia. When we visited, Van Dael led services at two different churches and handed out soup to children, something he said he does every day.

Everywhere he went, Father Jan was met with reverence and respect.

In a lengthy interview, he told GlobalPost he has never been sexually attracted to children. He said all the accusations against him are lies, drummed up by abusive parents, envious competitors, or university students who don’t understand the world. He compared himself to Jesus Christ, saying he was a rebel, a trailblazer and a true humanitarian.

“Literally, pedophilia comes from the Greek, ‘pidos’ meaning child and ‘philia’ meaning friendship with children,” Van Dael said. “In the real sense of the word I’m a pedophile.”

The archbishop of Fortaleza, who has control over which priests celebrate Mass within the archdiocese, initially agreed to an interview. But after we confronted Van Dael about the accusations against him, the archbishop said he couldn’t meet with GlobalPost.

The Catholic Church has a long history of secrecy in matters related to sex abuse allegations, reaffirmed by a 2001 confidential apostolic letter written by Pope John Paul II.

The letter clarified that all cases of sexual abuse by priests were to be handled by the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, an internal affairs unit of the Catholic Church, which was then headed by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger (who became pope in 2005). The letter also reasserted that all such cases must be kept strictly confidential under the “pontifical secret,” a move that has been heavily criticized ever since.

In August, Livia Maria de Sousa, a federal prosecutor in Fortaleza, told GlobalPost that her staff had interviewed three people who formerly lived in Van Dael’s orphanage, as part of an ongoing investigation against the priest. She said the interviews had uncovered no new evidence against Van Dael, and added that investigators were also scheduled to interview the priest in September.

De Sousa lamented that abusive priests too often come to Brazil in search of prey. She said investigating child sex abuse within the church can be frustratingly slow and difficult — especially when suspects are revered as moral icons, and victims are too young to understand sexual contact. 

“Brazil is a country where Catholicism is very strong and present, and where the people really respect the church, priests, bishops and all religious authorities,” she said. “So it’s very difficult for a child to understand an act, a touch, that might have a sense of exploitation and abuse, and that is in fact abuse.”

Van Dael closed down Esperança da Criança a couple of years ago, when the Brazilian authorities changed their policies for housing troubled children. But he continues to come into daily contact with vulnerable children.

In doing so, Van Dael draws his legitimacy from the Archdiocese of Fortaleza and, ultimately, the Vatican. Despite years of accusations and investigations, Van Dael said he has never faced a formal investigation by the church.

Zero tolerance, double standard

Father Paul Madden is an admitted child molester.

In the 1970s, Madden, who was then a priest in the Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi, took a trip to Ireland with a 13-year-old boy in his parish. During that trip, according to a lawsuit filed by the victim in 2002, Madden “repeatedly molested and raped” the boy.

An earlier lawsuit, in 1994, ended with a $50,000 payout from the diocese and an apology letter to the victim’s parents, signed by Madden.

“Since 1973 I have been plagued with remorse and guilt for my molestation of your son,” reads the letter. “There is no excuse for my actions and I assume responsibility for them as a humble penitent.”

In 2003 — soon after the victim’s second lawsuit was dismissed because too much time had passed — Madden joined the Diocese of Chimbote, Peru. In April, GlobalPost found him celebrating his weekly Mass in the tiny, scruffy fishing village of Puerto Huarmey.

Approached after the service, Madden again admitted the abuse, though he wouldn’t elaborate on what occurred.

“Something happened, I was drunk, and I had never drank before in my life, it was the first time ever, and I woke up in the middle of the night, and … yeah, well, something happened,” he told GlobalPost.

Madden expressed remorse for his actions, but said that, in keeping with church teachings, God has forgiven him for his sins.

“I feel quite confident in the mercy of God, and I feel quite confident that God forgives all sin,” he said. “If I’m guilty, I’m forgiven.”

Still, he’s under no illusions that he’s been pardoned in the eyes of the American public, or even the American Catholic Church. Asked if he could return to work as a priest in the US, Madden, who is originally from Ireland, was clear.

“I don’t think so, no, because of this ‘zero policy.’ And this was before — that’s not just from Pope Francis, this came out years before in the US.”

Madden was referring to a “zero tolerance” policy on child sex abuse that was approved by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in 2002. The policy aimed to remove any and all priests who have abused children, no matter how long ago.

“When even a single act of sexual abuse by a priest or deacon is admitted or is established after an appropriate process in accord with canon law, the offending priest or deacon will be removed permanently from ecclesiastical ministry,” reads one of the rules approved by the Vatican after the conference.

Last year, Pope Francis ostensibly took the US church’s policy global when he wrote a letter to every Catholic bishop in the world stating that they must abide by the zero tolerance rules.

But victim advocates say the pope’s message was an exercise in public relations, and that meaningful change is still a long way off.

Anne Barrett-Doyle is a founder of BishopAccountability.org, which tracks abusive priests around the world. She said that despite the pope’s letter, it’s still entirely unclear what standards bishops worldwide are now being held to. She said the rules in the US, though far from perfect, remain much more stringent than church doctrine elsewhere.

“It’s a lie, it’s absolutely false that there’s anything approaching zero tolerance in the emerging abuse policies around the world,” Barrett-Doyle said.

In Peru, Madden’s church superior acknowledged that the new zero tolerance paradigm requires the diocese to act in this case.

Interviewed in the city of Chimbote, Vicar General Juan Roger Rodriguez Ruiz, the diocese’ second-in-command, said that Bishop Angel Simon Piorno was shocked to learn from GlobalPost about Madden’s past, and would scrutinize the priest in light of the zero tolerance policy.

“Some may find it hard, even painful, that the bishop has to investigate a priest, but it has to be done,” Rodriguez said. He added that Madden would be suspended if necessary.

However, in mid-August a member of Madden’s parish confirmed to GlobalPost by phone that the priest continued to preach every Sunday. We attempted to confirm this with Rodriguez, but our email and phone calls went unreturned.

Disgraced in Minnesota, welcomed back to Ecuador

To find Father Francisco “Fredy” Montero, one has to negotiate a deadly, precipitous mountain pass — so high that wisps of cloud sweep past — searching for a village that locals describe vaguely as “very remote” and “out there somewhere in the tropics.”

The road, gouged in places by great landslides, weaves down from chilly highlands to the steamy, banana-stuffed interior of central Ecuador’s Bolivar province. Here, an hour’s drive from the nearest small town and several hours from the nearest big city, is the hamlet of Las Naves.

On Google Maps, Las Naves appears as a ring of green jungle. There are no streets, landmarks or homes. It’s wildly different from the broad avenues of Minneapolis, Minnesota, where not long ago Montero made a name for himself as a gregarious priest, church journalist, part-time radio DJ and accused child molester.

Montero, then in his mid-30s, had been a popular addition to the Archdiocese of Minneapolis.

A quick talker with an easy smile, he charmed the local Hispanic population, helped to found a Spanish-language church newspaper and installed himself as a fixture in his adopted homeland.

But five years after arriving in a Minnesota blizzard, Montero’s cheerful façade fell apart. In 2007, an official at the archdiocese reported to the Minneapolis Police Department that Montero had been accused of abusing a 4-year-old girl. Detectives arrested the young priest, seizing his computer and other possessions.

“Father Fredy,” as he was known to parishioners, was hardly the archetypal pious priest. For months, according to a police report, he had been sleeping with at least one adult churchgoer — a witness to the abuse — who later told police she and the priest would have sex on Montero’s desk on a daily basis.

The little girl, who is not being identified at the request of her mother, was interviewed by a forensic psychologist and by other experts with the Hennepin County Child Protection Services. They concluded Montero had, indeed, abused the girl. Later, when Montero appealed that finding, the agency upheld it, according to a diocese document obtained by GlobalPost.

Police investigators searched through Montero’s computer, looking for evidence of child pornography. But prosecutors eventually decided there simply wasn’t enough evidence to charge the priest with a crime. Almost immediately, Montero flew back to Ecuador.

Sgt. Darren Blauert, the Minneapolis detective who investigated Montero, said although there were no charges brought, something happened to the child that was “very inappropriate.” He expressed serious concern that Montero had been allowed to continue to work with children.

“There was enough that I would be very concerned that this person was continuing what he was doing,” Blauert said.

GlobalPost’s trip to far-flung Guaranda, where Montero is now based, serves as a reminder of what a huge, sprawling institution the Catholic Church is, and how challenging it might seem to police priests who span the globe.

But thanks to the internet, for many priests a background check is only a few clicks away.

BishopAccountability.org maintains a database of more than 6,400 clerics who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse in the United States. The database contains extensive information about Montero, Madden, Van Dael and many other priests who have avoided scrutiny by simply getting on a plane and flying to a new country. 

In Montero’s case, there was no need to even double-check the priest’s background in those online records. Court documents show that the Minnesota accusations followed him to Ecuador.

A dossier sent from the Archdiocese of Minneapolis to Guaranda warned the South American diocese of Montero’s past. Archdiocese officials also reported the alleged abuse to the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican’s internal investigators.

But Montero was apparently able to shrug off his past once he arrived back in his native Ecuador.

After a brief hiatus, during which he said he was employed as a journalist, Montero was placed in a succession of remote local parishes in the diocese of Guaranda, where he continued to celebrate Mass and interact extensively with young people. He eventually stopped working as a priest a couple of years ago — not because of the accusations against him or the potential harm he might inflict on children, but because he decided to run for mayor of Las Naves. The local bishop decided politics and priesthood weren’t a good mix, he said.

Bishop Angel Sanchez, who welcomed Montero back to Guaranda, now heads a different diocese in Ecuador. He said in a telephone interview that at the time Montero returned to Ecuador he was aware of the accusations against the priest in the US. But Sanchez said he was confident of Montero’s innocence, since the case against him was “not concrete,” and the priest was never criminally charged.

The bishop also confirmed that, to his knowledge, Montero was not investigated further by the Vatican after arriving in Ecuador.

Victim advocates say Montero’s case is a textbook example of how the Catholic Church is shirking its responsibility to protect children.

Zero tolerance policies are one thing, but without meaningful implementation by local bishops — the Vatican’s footmen and enforcers in communities — church doctrines make little difference, according to Clohessy, the director of SNAP.

“There’s no checks and balances,” Clohessy said. “It’s like having speed limits with no cops.”

Minneapolis attorney Jeff Anderson agrees. Anderson, who has spent three decades suing priests and church officials for covering up child abuse, brought a lawsuit against Montero in 2007 and has kept track of the Ecuadorean priest in recent years.

Anderson said the onus to protect children was on the bishops of Guaranda and Minneapolis, whom he claims let Montero flee to Ecuador without being held accountable. And the ultimate responsibility for protecting children from predator priests, he says, lies with the Vatican.

“Until this pope removes top officials in these crimes and sends a message that he is serious, nothing seems to change,” Anderson said. “Until this pope turns over all the documents and all the offenders who they know are offenders and are in ministry and turn them over to law enforcement across the globe, there seems to be little that is being done or changed.”

David Joles, the father of the young girl whom Montero allegedly abused, finds it hard to talk about his disgust for the Catholic Church, and the pain Montero’s actions brought him and his family.

“Sometimes she would bring him up out of the blue,” he said. “She’d be riding in the car, sitting in the back seat and say things like, ‘Father Fredy kissed me on the lips.’”

In 2011, Joles’ daughter died from an inoperable brain tumor. She was 8 years old.

In the pain and anguish he’s had to endure since her passing, Joles is sickened that the man he says so bruised his daughter’s short life is still walking free, and could return to the pulpit at any time.

“I began to see the way [church officials] operate,” Joles said. “It was big business and from their point of view it seemed like the individual was always secondary to the business, and [my daughter] was just but one kid, one individual who had been harmed by a priest, but that Catholicism and the church was more important than people like [her].”

Back in Ecuador, GlobalPost confronted Montero.

After waiting for hours in Las Naves, we eventually spotted him on the narrow road leading into town. His Chevy pickup truck was overflowing with children, whom he had just taken to a local soccer tournament.

Initially reluctant, Montero eventually agreed to an interview on the side of the street in Las Naves. He stressed that he wasn’t hiding from anyone, and said he’d spent years working with children without any other accusations. He denied that the alleged abuse took place.

“There was an accusation, but there was no evidence,” he said.

A shady departure, a new commission, and a new tribunal

The Catholic Church has suffered grievously from the child sex abuse crisis in the US. The scandal has coincided with a decline in US Catholics’ Mass attendance, and church officials acknowledge that it has contributed to a sharp global decline of young people joining the ministry.

While the portion of Americans identifying themselves as Catholic has remained relatively stable, these days only about 27 percent say they are “strong” Catholics, down more than 15 points since the mid-1980s. Over the past 50 years, the number of US priests has also declined by about a third, according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, a Georgetown University-affiliated research center. In contrast, the worldwide Catholic population has remained consistent at about 17 percent. 

Early in Pope Francis’s papacy, there’s hope that the church is ready for meaningful change to protect children. Still, there’s already evidence that the pope appears unwilling to publicly confess to the church’s sins.

Consider the case of Father Carlos Urrutigoity, once one of the four most powerful churchmen in Paraguay. Urrutigoity had a big problem: He’d been accused of sexually abusing young men in two different dioceses in the US.

In 2014, following reports by BishopAccountability.org, GlobalPost traveled to Paraguay to confront Urrutigoity, who had been promoted to second-in-command of the diocese of Ciudad del Este in the country’s east.

GlobalPost found Urrutigoity celebrating Mass in the lavish surroundings of a major church there. He answered questions without hesitation, claiming that the accusations in his past were all lies. The enigmatic vicar general shrugged off with a smile the public claim by the bishop of Scranton, Pennsylvania that he posed a “serious threat to young people.”

One month after GlobalPost published its investigation on Urrutigoity, the Vatican sent a cardinal and a bishop to Paraguay on a well-publicized visit. The purpose of the trip was shrouded in secrecy, but a few weeks later, both Urrutigoity and the bishop of Ciudad del Este who had sheltered and promoted him were removed from the diocese by the Vatican.

Occurring just a year after Pope Francis rose to power, the move gave observers hope that the Vatican was finally getting serious about condemning and stamping out child abuse across the Catholic Church. South American activists in particular were hopeful that the Argentine pope was sending a signal by dismissing Urrutigoity, a fellow Argentine.

But a Vatican spokesman was quick to tell reporters that these dismissals had more to do with internal church politics than cleaning up abuse.

Urrutigoity’s apparent wrongdoing has so far gone unacknowledged by the church, and his alleged victims continue to suffer without the solace of justice.

There have been some positive steps, however. Last year, in addition to holding a well-publicized meeting with victims of abuse by priests, Pope Francis announced the creation of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. And in June the Vatican announced it was setting up a new system of tribunals to hear cases of bishops accused of protecting or covering up child abuse by priests.

GlobalPost tried for weeks to interview Boston’s Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley, who chairs the commission and proposed the new tribunals to the pope. His staff insisted that our story was outside the cardinal’s, and the commission’s, purview.

Numerous calls and emails to the Vatican press office went unreturned.

Peter Saunders, a lay member of the new pontifical commission and an advocate for victims of sexual abuse by priests, said the priests GlobalPost tracked down are exactly the sort of cases the Catholic Church, and new commission, need to be focusing on.

“Zero tolerance is meaningless unless it applies to the whole institution,” he said. “Arguably, some of the biggest problems are in the less well-off parts of the world, South America, Africa, the Far East. This is where we know many priests flee to in order to carry on their abuse, which is an absolute outrage.”

Saunders acknowledged that the commission’s remit is still a little fuzzy. “We’re all scratching our heads a bit,” he said. But he also expressed new optimism that a crisis he’s been sounding the alarm about for decades will be addressed.

“I have to remain hopeful until my hopes are dashed,” he said. “This is a new future for the church.”

When the church does nothing: “I wanted to kill him”

Throughout her early adulthood, Jennifer had terrible nightmares.

“She just kept dreaming of this man chasing her and chasing her. She kept spiraling down into a black hole,” her mother recalled in a recent interview with GlobalPost in San Antonio, Texas.

The man hunted her down, into the depths of the hole, until she woke up screaming, Jennifer’s mother said. Eventually, the mother told her daughter to try to keep the dream going, and to spin around inside it and confront the man who chased her through her nights.

Then the daughter had a startling revelation. The man in the dream was the same man she says sexually abused her in front of a stained glass window years before.

“She said it was Father Fred,” the mother said: Federico Fernandez Baeza.

In 1987, Fernandez was indicted by a grand jury on two second-degree felony charges of indecency with a child. The charges stemmed from his alleged abuse of two boys over two years.

A year later, Fernandez was negotiating a plea bargain with prosecutors, the family’s lawyer told local media. He had offered to plead guilty to the two counts of indecency in exchange for a 10-year suspended sentence and the promise that he would stay away from children and seek psychiatric help, the attorney told reporters.
 

But Fernandez and the Diocese of San Antonio’s lawyers were also negotiating a cash settlement with the family on the side, for more than $1 million, according to media reports.

Just before the plea bargain was to be heard in court, the cash settlement was finalized. Its terms were sealed and remain a secret.

A few days later, a district judge rejected Fernandez’s plea bargain. She told reporters that she rejected the deal because she did not believe the defendant should get special treatment because he was a priest.

But Fernandez never faced a trial.

After his plea deal was rejected, the San Antonio prosecutors suddenly dropped their case against him. The United Press International news agency quoted Bexar County District Attorney Fred Rodriguez as saying that prosecutors were looking out for the best interests of the victims, and that their family “had already been victimized once.” In asking for a dismissal, prosecutors told the judge that a trial would have been too traumatic for the children, the agency reported.

Fernandez, so close to pleading guilty to child sexual abuse, was free.

This judicial snafu so incensed one Texas state legislator that he introduced a bill that would bar victims of sexual abuse who receive cash settlements from later refusing to testify in criminal cases.

“State laws need to be changed so the guilty offender will not be able to buy off the victim and go free,” state Rep. Jerry Beauchamp told a San Antonio newspaper in 1989.

But the bizarre story of Federico Fernandez Baeza wasn’t yet over.

In 2011, Humberto Leal, a Mexican national on death row in Texas for raping and bludgeoning to death a 16-year-old girl in 1995 (a crime he denied committing), suddenly told his attorneys he had been molested as a child by Fernandez.

Leal told a forensic psychologist that the abuse began with inappropriate touching, and ended with anal rape when he was in 5th grade. The abuse revelations inspired a campaign for clemency from others who said Fernandez had abused them as well.

Leal’s legal team then found several more alleged victims of the priest. One was Jennifer. Months later, Leal was executed by lethal injection in Huntsville, Texas.

In GlobalPost’s investigation, finding Fernandez wasn’t particularly difficult. We tracked him down at the Universidad de San Buenaventura in Cartagena, where he holds the position of secretary, the second-highest administrative rank according to the university’s website.
 

Fernandez had been serving as a high-profile priest in Colombia since leaving the US in disgrace. He regularly posts “Sunday Reflections” on the website of a large church in Bogota, and when he joined the university in 2014, the appointment was announced onlinecomplete with a photo of a grinning Fernandez.

After flying to Cartagena to meet him, GlobalPost discovered that speaking to Fernandez would be far harder than finding him.

A guard at the university’s front gate called someone in Fernandez’s office, then informed us the priest was traveling, and prevented us from entering. During a game of cat-and-mouse that lasted several days and included hours of staking out the university entrance, three university officials confirmed that the priest had indeed been there when we asked to interview him. One of those officials, University Vice President Jorge Valdez, informed us the priest had not left town until the second morning. 

We also received several anonymous emails and phone calls from someone identifying themselves as “Limpieza Unidos” (which translates roughly to “Cleaning Together”) who claimed to be a university employee. The messages started arriving shortly after GlobalPost emailed Fernandez’s colleagues at the university. 

“I understand that you’re looking for Father Federico Fernandez and he’s hiding from you,” one email read. “I can tell you that he’s here at the university.”

After two brief phone conversations, Limpieza Unidos stopped answering the phone or responding to emails. Calls to the cellphone number for Fernandez that the source provided were also not picked up.

Outside the university gates, students expressed disgust and disbelief that an accused child abuser was employed as a top administrator at their school.

“Just like in the United States, that’s a crime here too. Sadly, they haven’t told us any of this, they’re showing us a different façade,” said 21-year-old microbiology student Jessie Palomino.

“It just makes you think, what is the church doing about these cases?” added her friend, 20-year-old Ena Acosta.

Back in San Antonio, other Catholics were wondering the same thing.

Jennifer’s father told GlobalPost he remains deeply distressed by the nightmares that haunted his daughter. He said his family life has long revolved around the local church. (He asked not to be identified out of concern about backlash from parishioners.)

A former military man, he said he thought many times about taking matters into his own hands. He said he had tried to get postings near Fernandez, so he could slip across the border into Colombia in pursuit of the priest.

“I was going to kill him,” Jennifer’s father said. “I think the whole Catholic Church has failed us, especially around this community. And I’m talking about the orders, the bishops, the cardinals, everybody involved in the Church. They know they have a problem, but they continue to let these things happen.”

This story investigation was originally published by our partners at GlobalPost.

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.

Rabbi Yosef Feldman accused of mixed messages on child abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

KATHERINE TOWERS
THE AUSTRALIAN
SEPTEMBER 19, 2015

One of the most senior religious figures of the Jewish ultra-orthodox movement in NSW, Rabbi Yosef Feldman, allegedly engaged in a disingenuous “public relations” exercise in urging sexual abuse victims to contact police as he privately pressured his flock not to report outside the community.

In a scathing submission to the child sex abuse royal commission released yesterday, counsel assisting Maria Gerace said Rabbi Feldman refused to accept that Jewish organisations had a responsibility to report the sexual abuse of children to secular authorities, despite publicly stating the opposite.

She said his public statements in 2011 supporting calls for rabbin­ical organisations to encourage victims to report claims to police were merely an attempt to mitigate damage to his reputation caused by the publication of emails attacking the victims of sexual abuse.

In explosive evidence to the royal commission in February this year, Rabbi Feldman, formerly the president of the Rabbinical Council of NSW, said Jewish leaders should not publicly encourage victims to go to police because it fed media “hype” and caused “fake” victims to make up allegations.

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

Pastor ran bottom-spanking cult by brainwashing women to think he was exorcising demons, court told

UNITED KINGDOM
Croydon Advertiser

A PASTOR sexually abused women by brainwashing them in spanking sessions that he said would exorcise their demons, a court has heard.

Howard Curtis, 72, is accused of running a “cult” when he was pastor and leader of the “religion-based-organisation” Coulsdon Christian Fellowship, in Chipstead Valley Road, where he would allegedly spank women and children “to bring them closer to God”.

Curtis, now of Bloxworth Close, Wallington, denies a total of 12 charges, including four counts of sexual assault, two of indecent assault, five of child cruelty and one of assault by penetration, against seven different victims.

His trial started at Croydon Crown Court today.

Jane Osborne, prosecuting, said Curtis had “disciplined” the women, sometimes at his office in the church or their own homes, by spanking them, for his own pleasure.

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.

MI–Admitted Mississippi predator still works in parish

MISSISSIPPI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Sept. 17

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

An admitted predator priest from the US is now on the job in Peru, a new investigation has found. We beg Catholic officials in Mississippi and Chimbote to do everything possible to warn unsuspecting families about him and help law enforcement pursue him. And we beg Pope Francis to denounce and stop this long-standing stunningly-irresponsible church practice of sending predator priests abroad to work among even more vulnerable parishioners.

(Almost two years ago, we prodded newly-named Jackson Bishop Joseph R. Kopacz to publicize Fr. Madden’s crimes and alert Catholics in Chimbote to his presence there. Kopacz ignored our pleas.)

[SNAP]

In the 1970s, Fr. Paul Madden was a priest in Jackson. He repeatedly raped and sexually assaulted a 13-year-old boy from his parish on a trip to Ireland.

In 2002, that victim filed a lawsuit.

In 1994, “an earlier lawsuit ended with a $50,000 payout from the diocese and an apology letter to the victim’s parents, signed by Madden,” according to GlobalPost.

“Since 1973 I have been plagued with remorse and guilt for my molestation of your son,” reads the letter.

In 2003, Fr. Madden joined the Diocese of Chimbote, Peru.

For decades, bishops and popes have engaged in this same dangerous and disingenuous pattern – sending proven, admitted or credibly accused priests abroad to more vulnerable communities – and continue to do so now, despite persistent pledges of reform.

Every single Catholic employee in the dioceses where these predator priests have been or are now should be shouting from the rooftops to secular and church authorities to take immediate action to safeguard children from these child molesting clerics.

And Pope Francis should promptly fire their supervisors and every other Catholic staffer, high or low, who has enabled or is enabling this horror to continue.

(NOTE – Bishop Kopacz has also been named as a defendant in clergy sex abuse suits or been accused of concealing crimes involving Father Albert M. Liberatore Jr., Father Carlos Urrutigoity, and Father Eric Ensey. See BishopAccountability.org)

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.

Met police set up new child abuse team

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Jamie Grierson and Sandra Laville
Friday 18 September 2015

The Metropolitan police have set up a new team of 90 officers to deal with investigations into alleged attempts to cover up child abuse by high-profile figures.

At Scotland Yard, the Independent Police Complaints Commission is managing internal investigations into 29 allegations of police corruption in the handling of child abuse claims. Among the allegations are claims that special branch and senior police intervened to block investigations into high-profile figures, including politicians.

The team will also deal with the demands of the statutory inquiry into institutional child sexual abuse, led by Justice Goddard, and with criminal investigations relating to Operation Fairbank, the umbrella inquiry into child sex abuse claims involving high-profile figures, and Yewtree, which was set up amid the Jimmy Savile scandal.

In a statement the Met police said: “The MPS is in the process of establishing a specific team in response to the combined demands of the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse led by Justice Goddard, the investigations following our referrals to the IPCC, and the ongoing related criminal investigations relating to Operations Fairbank and Yewtree. It is anticipated that this team will comprise about 90 staff, with some staff in place already.”

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.

Lincoln diocese to take part in USCCB clergy sex abuse audit

NEBRASKA
National Catholic Reporter

Catholic News Service | Sep. 18, 2015

LINCOLN, NEB.
The Lincoln, Neb., diocese will again take part in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ clergy sexual abuse audit.

It will be the first time since the first audit, in 2003, that the diocese is undergoing the audit.

The announcement was made by Lincoln Bishop James Conley in his column in the Sept. 10 issue of the Southern Nebraska Register, Lincoln’s diocesan newspaper.

“The audit is a voluntary process. It involves review of diocesan policies, and review of the extent to which we follow our policies. It does not involve review of our priests’ personal information, or of the personal and private information of diocesan employees or parishioners. It is designed to be a tool,” Conley said.

He said his decision is for the 2016 audit alone. “After that time, I will consult with our priests and local lay experts again, in order to determine whether or not we should continue,” he said.

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

Former KC bishop Robert Finn on pilgrimage in Spain

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

BY JUDY L. THOMAS
jthomas@kcstar.com

When Pope Francis arrives next week for his first U.S. visit as pontiff, former Kansas City bishop Robert Finn will not be among the Catholic prelates gathering to welcome him.

Finn, who resigned as leader of the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph in April in the aftermath of a priest sex abuse scandal, is out of the country on a month-long pilgrimage in Spain.

The diocese confirmed Finn’s whereabouts after The Star received reports of sightings of the bishop along the Camino de Santiago, an ancient passage in Spain that has been traveled by kings, popes and even movie stars.

Diocesan spokesman Jack Smith said Finn was expected to return to Kansas City at the end of the month. That means Finn will be out of the country for the pope’s U.S. visit. Francis arrives Tuesday in Washington, D.C., and then will spend time in New York and Philadelphia before returning to Rome on Sunday.

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.

Glimpses of Jesus in the darkness of abuse

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service – Rhymes with Religion

Boz Tchividjian | Sep 18, 2015

In a season when we continue to learn about churches making bad decisions about child sexual abuse, the darkness can easily overwhelm us. In those painful moments, I often find myself in tears asking and wondering, where is Jesus in all of this mess?

If Jesus is the head of the Church, shouldn’t His church be the greatest protector and supporter for the vulnerable and the hurting? Where is Jesus when churches fail to respond wisely to sexual abuse and then refuse to take responsibility or repent for such colossal failures? Where is Jesus when churches make expedient decisions that affirm offenders, rather than making difficult decisions in the best interests of children and abuse survivors? Where is Jesus when churches go out of the way to advocate for offenders, while hurting victims watch in terror and isolation? Where is Jesus when churches refuse to acknowledge their need for help from experts, thinking that they know best? Where is Jesus when churches simply aren’t teachable? Where is He? These are the painful questions I am asking all too often these days.

In these moments, when I am just about to give up on finding answers, God often displays His kindness and love to me by showing me flashes of light in the darkness. This week, God has reminded me of the many churches across this great country that have taken remarkable actions related to understanding and responding to child sexual abuse. As Henri Nouwen aptly explains, these flashes of light reveal the hidden but real presence of God. These flashes of light are the glimpses of Jesus I’ve been so desperate to see. Let me show you a few of those flashes of light.

I’ve seen glimpses of Jesus in a church that demonstrated public repentance. In 2011, senior pastor Peter James of Vienna Presbyterian Church, before his congregation, stated, “We failed as leaders to extend the compassion and mercy that you needed. Some of you felt uncared for, neglected and even blamed for this abuse. I am sorry. The church is sorry.” Six years earlier, the church learned that its youth director had been engaged in sexual offenses against the minors in the church. At the time, the church made the offender resign and reported the offense to child protective services.

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.

Ezzati en Te Deum: “Me he sentido expuesto a una crítica descalificadora”

CHILE
Radio U Chile

[Despite criticism, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati led the Te Deum Ecumenical ceremony. Some demonstrators protested while inside the absence of political leaders was evident.]

Pese a las críticas, Ricardo Ezzati encabezó la ceremonia del Te Deum Ecuménico. Algunos manifestantes protestaron en contra del Arzobispo, mientras en el interior, la ausencia de líderes políticos de la Nueva Mayoría marcó el encuentro.

En conmemoración de los 205 años de la instalación de la Primera Junta Nacional de Gobierno, como es tradicional, se inició el Te Deum Ecuménico en la catedral de la iglesia católica de Santiago.

En un primer símbolo de homenaje a las víctimas del terremoto que este miércoles azotó a la zona centro-norte del país, doce campanadas sonaron para dar inicio a la ceremonia.

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.

Sacerdote arrestato, le accuse: dalla coazione sessuale all’abuso di fanciulli

SVIZZERA
Tio

[A priest, 64, has been arrested in Lugano, Switzerland on charges of molesting children.]

LUGANO – E’ arrivata in serata la conferma da parte del Ministero Pubblico e della Polizia cantonale della decisione della Procuratrice Pubblica Chiara Borelli di aprire un procedimento penale nei confronti di un sacerdote svizzero di 64 anni domiciliato nel Luganese.

Si tratta, come anticipato questo pomeriggio, di un sacerdote senza più incarichi diocesani e pastorali fissi. Nei suoi riguardi si ipotizzano diversi reati: atti sessuali con persone dipendenti, coazione sessuale, sfruttamento dello stato di bisogno, favoreggiamento e sviamento della Giustizia, nonché atti sessuali con fanciulli.

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.

Nach angeblichen sexuellen Übergriffen unter Kindern in Kita – Entlassene Erzieherin und Kirche einigen sich auf Vergleich

DEUTSCHLAND
news4teachers

MAINZ. Das Bistum Mainz und eine entlassene Erzieherin haben sich nach dem Skandal an einer katholischen Kita vorerst auf einen Vergleich geeinigt. Bis zum 1. Oktober hätten beide Parteien die Möglichkeit, die Entscheidung zu widerrufen, erklärte die Anwältin der Erzieherin, Kerstin Klein, am Donnerstag. Über den Inhalt des Vergleichs sei Stillschweigen vereinbart worden.

Die Verhandlung vor dem Arbeitsgericht fand unter Ausschluss der Öffentlichkeit statt. Das Gericht bestätigte, dass das Verfahren noch nicht abgeschlossen sei. Man werde in Ruhe über einen Widerruf nachdenken, sagte Klein.

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.

Syracuse’s Catholic bishop, sexual abuse and the harm that words can do (Editorial)

NEW YORK
Syracuse.com

By Editorial Board
on September 18, 2015

Adding insult to abomination, the Catholic bishop of Syracuse testified in 2011 that a child sexually abused by a priest was “culpable” and “an accomplice” in his own victimization.

Bishop Robert Cunningham’s stinging words, spoken as he was questioned for a lawsuit filed by the victim of the abuse, were reported Sept. 13 by Syracuse.com and The Post-Standard. They sent a wave of shock and horror through the community of Catholics and non-Catholics alike.

The bishop was quick to issue a public letter attempting to clarify his views. “Victims of abuse are never at fault!” he wrote. “. . . It is obvious my choice of words should have been better.”

But the damage has been done.

Cunningham’s insensitivity in this particular instance, and his unwillingness to divulge the names of priests against whom the diocese has found credible allegations of child-molesting, have severely damaged his credibility on matters of clergy sexual abuse.

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

Child sex abuse laws: Greens push to remove time limit on victims’ damages claims

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

September 17, 2015

Emma Partridge
State Politics Reporter

Child abuse victims would be able to seek damages regardless of when they were abused under new laws proposed on Thursday.

It is not acceptable to make victims of abuse wait any longer for these simple, practical changes.

The NSW Greens introduced a bill to State Parliament to remove complex limitation times following recommendations from the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse on Monday.

A report on redress and civil litigation recommended state and territory governments remove any limitation periods that applied to damage claims by a person who had been sexually abused.

Victoria removed the limitations under laws introduced in February this year.
“These findings from the royal commission are comprehensive and unambiguous. It is not acceptable to make victims of abuse wait any longer for these simple, practical changes to the law here in NSW,” Greens justice spokesman David Shoebridge 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.

Investigators Allege a Clergy Abuse PipeLine: From The USA to Latin America

UNITED STATES
WGBH

[with audio]

By PHILLIP MARTIN

Pope Francis arrives in the United States next week and will be traveling to DC, New York and Philadelphia. Boston, the nation’s 4th largest archdiocese, is not part of the Pope’s agenda on this trip. No doubt such a visit would have resurrected still unresolved issues connected to the Sex Abuse Scandal. But this week the issue came to the surface with the publication of a new investigative report tracing some accused clergy to parishes outside the U.S.

What happens to Catholic clergy accused of sexually molesting children? Some have been successfully sued. A handful have been convicted. And some of them have ended up presiding over parishes throughout Latin America.

“We’re talking about cases where there were big investigations, big stories, front page news, TV news about these men and where a few weeks later they were allowed to transfer from the United States to South America and immediately go back to working for the church.”

That is the finding of an exhaustive yearlong investigation by Globalpost.com, published days before Pope Francis is scheduled to arrive in the United States. Will Carless is a correspondent for the Boston-based news organization. We spoke with him from his home in Rio de Janeiro.

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.

Preliminary Royal Commission Findings …

AUSTRALIA
Failed Messiah

Preliminary Royal Commission Findings Savage Chabad Child Sex Abuse, Coverups, Shunning And Harassment Of Victims, Rabbis’ Lies

The Counsel Assisting’s submission of findings to Australia’s Royal Commission investigating child sex abuse at Chabad institutions in Australia has just been released.

The Counsel Assisting’s findings are very bad for Chabad, and in her submission Chabad rabbis in Melbourne and Sydney come out looking awful – because they were awful. They repeatedly protected child rapists and other pedophiles and harassed victims and when they were caught, they lied to cover it up, as this brief excerpt on Chabad’s yeshiva in Sydney, Australia and on its former head, Rabbi Yosef “Yossi” Feldman shows (This excerpt begins on page 120 of the submission, which is posted in full as a PDF file at bottom):

Available findings on Yeshiva Bondi’s response to the conviction and sentencing of Daniel Hayman

F18 On 1 July 2014, just 19 days after the sentencing of Daniel Hayman for an offence of child sexual abuse perpetrated in connection with the activities of Yeshiva Bondi, leaders of Yeshiva Bondi held a function to celebrate the life and work of the Lubavitcher Rebbe and listed Daniel Hayman as a sponsor of the event and thanked him for his patronage. In so doing, Yeshiva Bondi demonstrated an insensitivity to and a disregard for AVB’s experience as a survivor of child sexual abuse perpetrated by Hayman at a camp run by Yeshiva Bondi.

F19 After Daniel Hayman’s conviction, leaders of the Yeshiva Centre did not reach out to AVB as a survivor of abuse perpetrated by Daniel Hayman.

F20 As late as July 2014, Rabbi Yosef Feldman was of the opinion that rabbinical organisations should not encourage people to report all allegations of child sexual abuse to the authorities.

F21 As late as July 2014, Rabbi Yosef Feldman did not accept there was a halachic obligation for any allegation of child sexual abuse, whenever committed, to be reported to the authorities.

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

Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 18 September 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed Fr. David Tencer, O.F.M. Cap., as bishop of Reykjavik (area 103,000, population 325,671, Catholics 11,454, priests 15, religious 37), Iceland. The bishop-elect was born in Nova Bana, Slovakia in 1963 was ordained a priest in 1986. He gave his solemn vows in 1994. He holds a licentiate in theology and has served as pastor in Holic, rector of the convent of Hrinova, and superior of the convent in Zilina. He transferred to Iceland in 2004 where he has served as vicar of Stella Maris in Reykjavik, and is currently pastor of the parish of St. Þórlákur (Thorlak) in Reyðarfjörður. He succeeds Bishop Peter Burcher, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same diocese in accordance with canon 401 para. 2 of the Code of Canon Law was accepted by the Holy Father.

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.

Eight days to go, still no pope contract

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

SAM WOOD, PHILLY.COM
LAST UPDATED: Friday, September 18, 2015

With just over a week until Pope Francis and more than a million pilgrims converge on Philadelphia, event organizers have yet to finalize a contract with the city spelling out what costs they will bear.

Neither the World Meeting of Families nor the city would explain what is holding up negotiations.

“We are in active, regular, and daily discussions with our partners at the World Meeting of Families considering the contractual issues while doing all that needs to be done to prepare for this great event,” Mayor Nutter’s spokesman, Mark McDonald, said in a statement Thursday afternoon. “There will be a signed contract, and there’s nothing unusual about where we are now.”

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.

Our website address has changed

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse

18 September

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) has updated the URL of its website.

The website is being hosted on its new domain iicsa.org.uk. Our new URL is now www.iicsa.org.uk.

The helpline number remains unchanged: 0800 917 1000.

You can email us at contact@iicsa.org.uk

You can write to us: Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, PO Box 72289, London, SW1P 9LF.

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 Disputes White House Guest List for Papal Visit

UNITED STATES
Wall Street Journal

By FRANCIS X. ROCCA
Sept. 17, 2015

On the eve of Pope Francis’s arrival in the U.S., the Vatican has taken offense at the Obama administration’s decision to invite to the pope’s welcome ceremony transgender activists, the first openly gay Episcopal bishop and an activist nun who leads a group criticized by the Vatican for its silence on abortion and euthanasia.

According to a senior Vatican official, the Holy See worries that any photos of the pope with these guests at the White House welcoming ceremony next Wednesday could be interpreted as an endorsement of their activities.

The tension exemplifies concerns among conservative Catholics, including many bishops, that the White House will use the pope’s visit to play down its differences with church leaders on such contentious issues as same-sex marriage and the contraception mandate in the health care law.

The White House didn’t respond to requests for comment on the Vatican’s reaction to the ceremony’s guest list. White House press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters Thursday he was unaware of the names of individuals on the guest list, but cautioned against drawing any conclusions on specific guests “because there will be 15,000 other people there too.”

In the last few days, several people have acknowledged or made public their receipt of invitations to the event, which will be held on the White House’s South Lawn on the morning of Pope Francis’ first full day in the U.S.

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.

Rabbis slammed by Counsel Assisting the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
The Australian Jewish News

COUNSEL Assisting the Royal Commission Maria Gerace has slammed several rabbis in her submission to the Royal Commission.

Gerace said in her submissions, which were made public yesterday that Rabbi Yosef Feldman’s statement to the Royal Commission that “without qualification … it is obligatory to immediately report all allegations of sexual abuse to the police” is not a true representation of his views, that Yeshiva in Sydney was put on notice about Daniel ‘Gug’ Hayman’s abuse years before he sexually assaulted victim AVB and that alleged perpetrator AVL had informed Rabbis Pinchus Feldman and Yosef Feldman that he might leave the country, on a pre-paid ticket by Yeshiva in Sydney, within 24 hours of finding out that he was being investigated for a case of child sexual abuse.

With regards to Yeshivah in Melbourne, Gerace submitted that Rabbi Tzvi Hirsch Telsner used a sermon in 2011 to convey to the community his disapproval of Manny Waks’ decision to speak publicly about his abuse, that Rabbi Avrohom Glick’s evidence that he “did not know of complaints about Cyprys prior to 2004”, “is not persuasive” and that when parents complained to rabbis about David Kramer sexually abusing children, Kramer left the country on an airline ticket paid for by the Yeshivah Centre “within days”.

In relation to David Cyprys, she submitted that Rabbi Groner was first made aware of complaints against Cyprys in 1984, was told about a complaint again in 1986 and was told about Cyprys’ ongoing abuse in 1991 but that Cyprys still continued to attend the Yeshivah Centre for a decade after the 1991 complaint.

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 into historical sex offences …

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Royal Commission into historical sex offences results in arrest 52 year-old western suburbs teacher

Sam Kelton
The Advertiser

A TEACHER teacher from Adelaide’s western suburbs has been arrested as part of a national Royal Commission into historic child sex offences – the second arrested in South Australia since the commission began.

Detectives from the Special Crimes Investigation Branch Royal Commission Response Team arrested the 52-year-old man on Thursday night and charged him with three counts of indecent assault, two of which are of an aggravated nature.

The offences are alleged to have occurred between 2000 and 2001.

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.

Submissions for Yeshivah Melbourne and Yeshiva Bondi public hearing published

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

18 September, 2015

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has published the written submissions into the Yeshivah Melbourne and Yeshiva Bondi public hearing.

The public hearing examined the response of Yeshivah Melbourne and Yeshiva Bondi to allegations of child sexual abuse.

The submissions can be found on the Case Study 22 page.

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.

80 personas marcharon en Osorno contra obispo Barros y despliegue de seguridad en Te Deum

CHILE
Bio Bio

[In Orsorno, Chile, 80 people marched in opposition to Bishop Juan Barros and against deployment of security people at the Independence Day Te Deum.]

Una nueva marcha contra el obispo Juan Barros realizó un grupo cercano a las 80 personas en la víspera del Te Deum de este viernes 18 de septiembre, actividad en la que se quejaron por el despliegue de seguridad programado desde el Gobierno, aún cuando remarcaron que de todas formas llegarán hasta la Catedral San Mateo.

Y es que el despliegue de seguridad anunciado desde la Gobernación Provincial, que contempla un perímetro especial de control de Carabineros, fue calificado como desmedido, aún cuando no se aleja de cómo ha sido el transitar del obispo Juan Barros en Osorno, según comentó el concejal Carlos Vargas.

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

Sex Abuse Survivor Revives One-Man Play for Pope’s Visit

UNITED STATES
America Magazine

Margot Patterson

Ten years ago, poet, playwright and performer Michael Mack Googled the name of the priest who had sexually abused him decades earlier when he was an 11-years-old boy living in North Carolina. He found out his abuser was alive and living in Worcester, Mass., not too far from where Mack lived in Boston. After years of holding imaginary conversations with the priest who had molested him, Mack decided to seek him out to have a real one. What followed is the subject of “Conversations with My Molester: A Journey of Faith,” a play written and performed by Mack and directed by Daniel Gidron, which will open in New York City on Sept. 24, the day Pope Francis arrives there as part of his visit to the United States.

Three years ago when the play premiered at Mack’s parish church, the Church of St. Paul in Cambridge, Mass., and then was subsequently staged elsewhere in Boston and the Washington, D.C., area, the play won plaudits from The Boston Globe, The New York Times, The Washington Post, National Public Radio, CBS News and others. Its performance in New York this fall follows Mack presenting the play in New York City’s Midtown International Theatre Festival last year and winning the award for best script. His performance in it also won a nomination for best solo performance. These accolades, plus the scheduled visit to the United States of Pope Francis, led to the upcoming revival at New York’s Bridge Theatre, where it will run until Oct. 11. (For more information, see http://www.michaelmacklive.com)

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.

Paedophile Christian Brother Ted Bales has jail sentence increased after prosecution appeal

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A Christian Brother and convicted paedophile who abused dozens of boys while working at schools across Victoria has had his jail sentence increased, after the Court of Appeal found it to be inadequate.

Ted Bales, 65, was jailed in March for six years after pleading guilty to indecently assaulting boys, aged between eight and 14, when he was a teacher and headmaster at a number of Christian Brother colleges.

He was given a non-parole period of three years.

But the state’s Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) then launched an appeal against the jail term, arguing it was inadequate.

Court of Appeal today ruled in favour of the DPP and resentenced Bales to eight years and five months’ jail, with a five-year no-parole period.

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.

More jail time for Vic Christian Brother

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A Christian Brother who sexually abused 20 boys in his care will spend longer in prison after a Victorian court increased the sentence for one of his most terrible crimes.

Prosecutors appealed the maximum six-year jail sentence imposed on Edward ‘Ted’ Bales, who was to serve a minimum of three years after he pleaded guilty to 34 historical child sex abuse charges.

The Court of Appeal on Friday handed Bales a jail term of eight years and five months, with a non-parole period of five years and eight months, after finding he wasn’t handed enough jail time for a ‘brazen’ indecent assault.

The assault of the 11-year-old boy in his own bed while his parents were home was close to the worst conceivable example of the offence, Crown prosecutor Gavin Silbert QC told the court earlier this month.

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: Admitted, Accused Child-Abusing U.S. Priests Continue to Work in Latin America

UNITED STATES/LATIN AMERICA
Slate

By Ben Mathis-Lilley

An upsetting report published Thursday by the Global Post documents the cases of several Catholic priests who have left areas where they’ve admitted to or been credibly accused of child sexual abuse only to continue their careers in South America:

Even as Pope Francis has touted reform of the Vatican’s safeguards against child abuse, GlobalPost has found that the Catholic Church has allowed allegedly abusive priests to slip off to parts of the world where they would face less scrutiny from prosecutors and the media.

In a yearlong investigation, we tracked down and confronted five such priests. All were able to continue working for the church despite serious accusations against them. When we found them, all but one continued to lead Mass, mostly in remote, poor communities in South America.

The current pope has said in a letter to bishops worldwide that the church should have a “zero tolerance” policy on sexual abuse, defrocking those who are established internally to have committed abusive acts. Such internal deliberations, however, are kept secret, and the Global Post writes that “neither the Vatican nor the chairman of a new papal commission set up specifically to tackle church child abuse” agreed to requests for interviews about its story. In any case, one of the priests covered in the piece admitted in 1994 to molesting a child in Mississippi—but still works and celebrates Mass in Peru.

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

Catholic Church pedophile enjoys new life in Colombia

COLOMBIA
Colombia Reports

Posted by Grace Brown on Sep 17, 2015

A former priest in the US accused of pedophilia was found to have escaped charges, becoming a high-profile priest and a senior member of staff at a university in Colombia’s northern city of Cartagena.

According to a report by US news website Global Post, members of the Catholic Church accused of pedophili in the US or Europe have been seeking refuge in less developed countries across South America where they can continue filling senior roles in the church seemingly innocently.

A Colombian example is “Father Fred”, who left San Antonio, Texas after being accused of child abuse and subsequently sidestepping the case that ensued.

Reverend Federico Fernandez Baeza was tracked down by Global Post in Cartagena at the Universidad de San Buenaventura, where he holds the position of secretary, the second-highest administrative rank according to the university.

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

Why The Pope Chose Philadelphia?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Public Record

by Joe Shaheeli

Pope Front copyThere are as many answers for this one question as one can dream up.

To us, first is the fact the very popular World Meeting of Families will bring on its own several hundred thousand of the faithful.

This city is strategically located on the eastern seaboard. Its cost of living is below those of Washington and New York, places the Pope will also be visiting, and cheaper for those attending. We have an efficient, busy airport on the main stops of all airlines. Railroad lines go into the city’s heart. SEPTA has worked hard to insure maximum passenger traffic will be delivered to Center City for papal events.

South Jersey and our adjacent bedroom counties offer backup for the well over million now anticipated for meeting of World Family of Nations with the announcement of Pope Francis’ visit the same weekend. …

But look then at the mess the Philadelphia Diocese has been in. A mess that cost hundreds of millions of dollars to settle claims of sexual abuse by gay pedophile priests. Then DA Lynne Abraham released a grand-jury report that had shown the diocesan hierarchy was to blame in the way it handled that era, often sending those priests to other parishes to continue their perversion after parishioners raised the heat and demanded them out. You could trace the responsibility up to the cardinals who led the diocese during that period.

Dismayed Catholics fell away by the thousands, a main reason why parochial attendance dropped, resulting in the merging of parishes, the closing of schools. Confusion ran rampant.

The same problems have occurred around Catholic institutions in other cities. So the Pope could get a better handle or suggest how his leadership in the States should handle what needs to be done.

In came a hard-nosed Archbishop Charles Chaput, who, when exasperated at the slow pace of charge, would tell priests and others, “I wish I were back at the Indian reservation with my people.” He stands to look good, and could earn a cardinalship depending on how this visit and the Families meeting go off. Or he might get his wish.

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.

Review: ‘Prophet’s Prey,’ a Documentary About Mormon Fundamentalists

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By MANOHLA DARGIS
SEPT. 17, 2015

The chief attraction of Colorado City, or so it would seem from the brief entry on the website of the Arizona Office of Tourism, isn’t Colorado City but the “nearby scenic attractions” that include the Vermilion and Shinarump Cliffs. Set at the base of ravishing red cliff mountains, the city and its twin, Hildale, Utah, look straight out of Canaan. To watch “Prophet’s Prey,” Amy Berg’s tough and disturbing documentary about a secretive, polygamous Mormon fundamentalist sect with unsettling roots in the region, is to grasp, perhaps, the unspoken reason the Arizona tourism office seems to be suggesting that visitors drive right on by.

The writer Jon Krakauer didn’t get the message. As he explains in “Prophet’s Prey,” his interest in these particular fundamentalists was sparked when, in 1999, he stopped at a gas station close to Colorado City and Hildale. There, he saw a group of women dressed in the sort of long prairie dresses that Laura Ingalls Wilder might have worn if she had liked frocks stitched out of pastel polyester. This curious sight led him on a journalistic investigation into Mormonism and its extremes, including the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (F.L.D.S.), a breakaway sect with thousands of polygamous true believers in the United States, Canada and Mexico. His book, “Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith,” hit in 2003, but Mr. Krakauer, a guiding voice in the documentary, is still on the case.

“Prophet’s Prey” was written and directed by Ms. Berg, whose earlier documentaries include “Deliver Us From Evil,” a contemporary horror story about Oliver O’Grady, a Roman Catholic priest and admitted pedophile who evaded punishment as he was moved from parish to parish for decades. He was finally defrocked and deported to Ireland, after doing time in prison.

In “Prophet’s Prey,” Ms. Berg has found an eerie counterpart to Mr. O’Grady in the person of Warren Jeffs, a Mormon fundamentalist serving a life sentence for the sexual assault of two followers, including a 12-year-old girl and a 15-year-old he impregnated. By the time he was on trial, Mr. Jeffs was thought to have 78 wives, including 12 who were 15 or younger when they wed.

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.

Guard testifies on behalf of Somerset County priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Paul Peirce
Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015

A longtime security guard at a Honduran orphanage told federal jurors in Johnstown on Thursday that he never heard complaints from any boys about a Somerset County priest on trial for sexual assaults and never saw the priest inappropriately touch a boy.

The security guard, identified as Jose Lucas, worked at the ProNino orphanage from 2000 to 2010 when the Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio of Windber allegedly molested and had sex with some of the boys during visits.

Maurizio, 70, was the pastor of Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Central City until his arrest Sept. 25 on multiple federal charges.

Maurizio is accused of traveling to Central America for his self-run nonprofit, Humanitarian Interfaith Ministries, between 2004 and 2009 to have sex with orphaned boys.

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.

Advocacy group for clergy abuse victims submits cases against Rigali, Burke to Vatican tribunal

UNITED STATES
St. Louis Public Radio

By STEPHANIE LECCI

Cases against two former St. Louis Catholic archbishops are being submitted to Pope Francis’ new Vatican tribunal that investigates bishops accused of covering up abuse.

The Catholic Whistleblowers, a group of retired priests, nuns and other advocates for victims of clergy abuse, called for investigations of Cardinals Justin Rigali and Raymond Burke earlier this week during a press conference in Philadelphia. Their announcement comes less than a week before the pope’s visit to the U.S.

The group said the tribunal, which was established by Francis in June, should look into whether Rigali and Burke committed “culpable negligence,” or knew better and didn’t act, in cases of suspected clergy abuse.

“We said, you know, it would be a mistake for the pope to have started something like this and people not to respond. When Rome announced in June that this had been established, it was very clear that they were inviting – in fact, the word ‘duty’ got used in one of the communications – people to make their concerns known,” said retired priest and canonical lawyer Father James Connell of Milwaukee.

The Whistleblower group’s Sister Maureen Paul Turlish of Delaware agreed.

“If no one sends anything in, then whoever is on this board is going to say, ‘Well, nobody said anything, so there’s no reason for us to exist,'” she said at the press conference.

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.

A conflict for abuse victims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

JULIA TERRUSO AND JEREMY ROEBUCK, INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS
LAST UPDATED: Thursday, September 17, 2015

Philip DiWilliams had mostly kept to himself what happened in a Roman Catholic High School counselor’s office in 1969. Years later, when he decided to seek therapy, he told his wife, but did not want to upset his children.

Now, as Philadelphia prepares to welcome Pope Francis with all the celebration a papal visit garners, DiWilliams has decided to share his story.

“I don’t understand why the mind works like it does. Why I can sit here years later and tell myself, ‘It wasn’t my fault,’ but it still bothers you,” says DiWilliams, 59, of Roxborough. “I think because you picture yourself then, a little kid, and it makes you angry still.”

For the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, slapped with scathing grand jury reports on clergy sex abuse in 2005 and 2011, followed by the unprecedented suspension of 30 parish priests, the papal visit is not only a celebration, it is in some ways a rebranding opportunity.

But for DiWilliams and others molested by priests, the popular pope’s arrival is difficult to celebrate without remembering the abuse suffered and the courtroom battles fought.

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.

New Yorkers abused by priests hope to make plea to Pope Francis

NEW YORK
WSAV

BUFFALO, N.Y. – (WIVB) – Two Western New Yorkers who were alleged victims of sexual abuse are hoping Pope Francis will learn of their stories when he visits the United States.

When Vanessa DeRosa of Niagara Falls was thirteen years old she says she was sexually touched and stalked by her Catholic school teacher Christian Butler. He later served time for abusing children.

Venessa, who is now twenty-six, says “I don’t trust anybody who is supposed to be trustworthy, anybody who is of authority.”

Tino Flores, now fifty-two years old, has required psychiatric care for decades.

Flores, of Buffalo, says beginning at age ten he was sexually molested for five years by the family’s Franciscan priest.

Father Linus Hennessey has since died, but Flores says he rejected a fifty-thousand dollar offer from the Franciscans to take care of his medical needs, although some of his medical expenses have been paid.

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.

September 17, 2015

Priest on trial: Witness says Maurizio is ‘a great person’…

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Posted: Thursday, September 17, 2015

Priest on trial: Witness says Maurizio is ‘a great person’; Honduran woman excused after brief testimony

By Kecia Bal
kbal@tribdem.com

Defense testimony Thursday in the federal case against the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr. appeared to be cut shorter than expected.

Jurors listened to testimony for about an hour and a half Thursday afternoon: an attorney, a woman who said she lives near the Honduran orphanage ProNino and the man witnesses said was a security guard at the orphanage where federal investigators say Maurizio targeted Honduran boys.

But testimony from the woman, who said her name was Reyna Isabella Garcia but who did not spell her name, lasted only a few minutes. Defense attorney Steven Passarello asked Garcia about four questions before a dispute put a halt to the testimony. One of those questions was about Garcia’s children.

The woman said she had a son who died three years ago and that she lived near the La Montana campus of ProNino.

When Passarello asked her whether her child was depicted in two photos central to allegations against the priest of child pornography possession, U.S. Department of Justice trial attorney Amy Larson objected. Passarello said he asked for a stipulation to avoid having Garcia identify her son in the photographs.

After a sidebar with the judge, Passarello returned and told Garcia that he had no more questions.

“Thank you for coming to the United States to testify, but I’m not going to put you through this,” he said.

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

Studie: Fast jedes elfte Kind in Deutschland sexuell missbraucht

DEUTSCHLAND
Evangelisch

[Study: Nearly every eleventh child sexually abused in Germany]

Laut der Studie “MiKADO – Missbrauch von Kindern: Ätiologie, Dunkelfeld, Opfer” ist jede neunte Frau (11,5 Prozent) als Mädchen missbraucht worden. Bei den Männern beträgt die Quote 5,1 Prozent, was geschlechterübergreifend einen Anteil von 8,5 Prozent ergibt, wie die Universität Regensburg am Donnerstag mitteilte.
Im Schnitt 9,5 Jahre alt

Frauen bewerteten die Misshandlung im Rückblick insgesamt als belastender als Männer, erläuterten die Forscher. Die Betroffenen seien bei ihrer ersten Missbrauchserfahrung im Schnitt 9,5 Jahre alt gewesen. Eine interdisziplinäre Gruppe von Wissenschaftlern hat 28.000 Erwachsene und mehr als 2.000 Minderjährige in den vergangenen dreieinhalb Jahren zu sexuellem Missbrauch in ihrer Kindheit befragt.

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.

CARDINALS JUSTIN RIGALI & RAYMOND BURKE ABUSE OF OFFICE

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

September 12, 2015 | Author: berger

Next Wednesday, the Catholic Whistleblowers Steering Committee will submit to Pope Francis‘ newly-established Vatican tribunal cases of abuse of office against the cardinals for their behavior in the St. Louis Archdiocese. The tribunal investigates and holds accountable bishops who abuse their office in matters of sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable adults. Members of the Whistleblowers Steering Committee include Dr. Robert M. Hoatson who will represent and speak on behalf of Carol Kuhnert whose brother, Fr. Norman H. Christian, deceased of the St. Louis Diocese, who sexually abused children before and during his years as a priest.

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

Rabbi Yosef Feldman’s abuse stance ‘not private’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JESSICA RAPANA
THE AUSTRALIAN
SEPTEMBER 18, 2015

A rabbi who told a royal commission there was too much “hype” surrounding child sex abuse and that pedophiles should receive greater leniency for historical ­offences says the questioning of his personal views by the body’s assisting counsel went too far.

Counsel for Rabbi Yosef Feldman Greg Smith yesterday submitted to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse that questioning and submissions on his personal views surrounding the appropriate reporting of sexual abuse, punishments for offenders and media coverage had gone ­beyond the commission’s terms of reference.

Rabbi Feldman had made comments at a public hearing in February, from which he later backed down, suggesting Jewish leaders should not publicly encourage victims to go to police as it fed media “hype” that caused “fake victims” to make allegations.

It was also revealed that Rabbi Feldman had sent a series of emails to other rabbis in 2011, when abuse allegations involving Yeshivah College in Melbourne became public amid a police investigation, arguing that Jews with information about child sex abuse allegations should see a rabbi rather than police. He also suggested pedophiles should not necessarily go to jail for historical child sex abuse if they had reformed.

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

Pope Francis’ Visit to the U.S.: 8 Questions for WSJ Vatican Reporter Francis X. Rocca

UNITED STATES
Wall Street Journal

Pope Francis has become a powerful if controversial figure since his election in 2013. He has advocated for social justice for the poor, issued an encyclical on the environment, and refused many of the opulent trappings of his office. Ahead of Francis’ visit to the U.S., WSJ’s Vatican correspondent Francis X. Rocca, who will be flying with the Pope on his visit, took questions from our readers in a Facebook Q&A. Here is part of the discussion.

Some questions and answers have been lightly edited.

Question from Christina A. Sears: As the Pope embarks on new territory for the Catholic church (as it relates to social injustice, immigrants, abortion, more tolerance of other religions, etc.), how does he handle opposition from those within the Catholic faith who are or who would like to remain more “traditional?”

Answer from Francis X. Rocca: First, it bears noting, as many progressive and conservative Catholics never tire of pointing out, that Pope Francis’ specific teachings on any the subjects you mention are not new. With regard specifically to inter-religious dialogue, you could argue that he has been LESS ambitious than John Paul II, who pioneered the spectacular prayer meetings at Assisi with Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims and others. That said, Francis clearly spends much more of his time talking about certain social justice issues — and with more passionate rhetoric — and places less emphasis on sexual and medical ethics than his two predecessors. So after 2.5 years the world has gotten the message that priorities have shifted. So how does he “handle” those who object? On the one hand, reminding people of his traditional side, as he did in a series of talks about the family this year —while generally avoiding conservative sound bites that would make headlines. And the other way, when necessary, is by choosing collaborators who share his general approach, and removing those who offer too much resistance. The prime example of the latter is US Cardinal Raymond Burke, former head of the Vatican’s supreme court, who opposed making it quicker and easier to receive marriage annulments — as Francis just did this month. …

Question from Nick Ingala: We’ve read that, if the Pope meets with clergy sexual abuse survivors during his trip, we probably won’t even hear about it until after the fact. Do you know whether the Pope will meet with survivors or ignore the scandal in the U.S.?

Answer from Francis X. Rocca: It’s very plausible that this is being planned, and now that it has been reported, it is much more likely to happen. Benedict met with abuse victims on several of his international trips. Francis has not done so yet, though he did meet some in the Vatican. The policy has always been to announce such meetings after the fact — though Francis himself broke the embargo before the Vatican meeting last year. I think he will also address clerical sex abuse in his public remarks in the U.S., probably to the U.S. bishops next Wednesday in Washington, since this is such an important issue for the bishops.

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

National–New report: Predator priests sent overseas, still working

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, September 17

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

In a year-long investigation, GlobalPost “has found that the Catholic Church has allowed allegedly abusive priests to slip off to parts of the world where they would face less scrutiny from prosecutors and the media.

Journalists “tracked down and confronted five such priests. All were able to continue working for the church despite serious accusations against them (and) all but one continued to lead Mass, mostly in remote, poor communities in South America.”

The investigation found that “Some of these men faced criminal investigations, but went abroad without charges being brought against them. One of the priests admitted to GlobalPost that he had molested a 13-year-old boy, and acknowledged that he can never work again in the US. He continues to preach in a small Peruvian fishing village. Another is currently under investigation by authorities in Brazil for a string of alleged molestations, including accusations in the poor neighborhoods where for two decades he ran a home for street children — with the support of the Catholic Church.”

GlobalPost reporter “interviewed one diocese leader in these communities, but was otherwise not granted interviews with local church officials. And despite protracted efforts and discussions with church press officers, neither the Vatican nor the chairman of a new papal commission set up specifically to tackle church child abuse would speak with us.”

For decades, bishops and popes have engaged in this same dangerous and disingenuous pattern – sending proven, admitted or credibly accused priests abroad to more vulnerable communities – and continue to do so now, despite persistent pledges of reform.

Every single Catholic employee in the dioceses where these predator priests have been or are now should be shouting from the rooftops to secular and church authorities to take immediate action to safeguard children from these child molesting clerics.

And Pope Francis should promptly fire their supervisors and every other Catholic staffer, high or low, who has enabled or is enabling

(See recent cases – within the last two weeks – involving New Jersey’s Fr. Espinoza and Oregon’s Fr. Bein. See also the case of Minnesota’s Fr. Joseph Jeyapaul, who fled to India where he oversaw schools even while criminal authorities were extraditing him.)

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

US priests accused of sex abuse get a second chance by relocating to South America

UNITED STATES/LATIN AMERICA
GlobalPost

Fugitive Fathers: How the Vatican’s alleged sex abusers hide and preach in South America (VIDEO)

South America has become a safe haven for the Catholic Church’s alleged child molesters

Will Carless on Sep 17, 2015

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — The Catholic Church has allowed priests accused of sexually abusing children in the United States and Europe to relocate to poor parishes in South America, a yearlong GlobalPost investigation has found.

Reporters confronted five accused priests in as many countries: Paraguay, Ecuador, Colombia, Brazil and Peru. One priest who relocated to a poor parish in Peru admitted on camera to molesting a 13-year-old boy while working in the Jackson, Mississippi diocese. Another is currently under investigation in Brazil after allegations arose that he abused disadvantaged children living in an orphanage he founded there.

All five were able to continue working as priests, despite criminal investigations or cash payouts to alleged victims. All enjoyed the privilege, respect and unfettered access to young people that comes with being clergy members.

In the US, Catholic leaders have come under intense pressure for concealing priests’ sex crimes, and for transferring perpetrators among parishes rather than turning them over to law enforcement. The scandal has cost the church billions of dollars and led to a sharp decline in new clergy.

VICTIM ADVOCATES SAY THAT RELOCATING PRIESTS TO POORER PARISHES OVERSEAS IS THE CHURCH’S LATEST STRATEGY FOR PROTECTING ITS REPUTATION.

In response, in 2002 US bishops approved a “zero-tolerance” policy, under which priests who molest children are no longer allowed a second chance to serve in the clergy.

Victim advocates say that relocating priests to poorer parishes overseas is the church’s latest strategy for protecting its reputation. …

The cases GlobalPost found are exactly what the church and Cardinal O’Malley’s commission need to be focusing on, said Peter Saunders, an advocate for abuse survivors and a lay member of the church’s commission.

“Zero tolerance is meaningless unless it applies to the whole institution,” he said. “Arguably, some of the biggest problems are in the less well-off parts of the world, South America, Africa, the Far East. This is where we know many priests flee to in order to carry on their abuse, which is an absolute outrage.”

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.

A papal visit can’t heal these wounds

PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Post

Story by Karen Heller

WILLOW GROVE, PA.

A statue of the Virgin Mary, bordered by mums, graces the verdant lawn of the McIlmail residence. In the driveway and on the suburban street are three Chevy Impalas, one of them formerly owned by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, long the family’s spiritual home and refuge.

The split-level is crowded with crosses, over doors and beds, and a swarm of butterflies adorns everything from shower curtains to a changing table. These are symbols of the McIlmails’ abiding faith, the cross from their decades as cradle-to-grave Catholics, the butterfly an emblem of comfort adopted in the wake of catastrophic loss.

Each night, Debbie, 59, a former hospital administrator whose employers included Catholic-run medical centers, spends 40 minutes reciting her prayers from a worn folder of cards. There is always a prayer for Sean, her middle child, who had a tattoo of the Virgin Mary on his back and a cross inked on his left arm.

In early 2013, Sean reported to the archdiocese that he had been sexually abused from ages 11 to 14 by a parish priest, Robert L. Brennan, since retired, who had been removed from priestly duties years earlier because of previous allegations.

Brennan had been named in a 2005 grand jury report alleging “inappropriate or suspicious behavior . . . with more than 20 boys from four different parishes,” cases that never made it to court because of a statute of limitations.

Sean, who alleged that he had been abused from about 1998 to 2001, came forward soon enough to meet the law’s requirements. But days before he was scheduled to testify at a preliminary hearing, he died of a heroin overdose. He was 26. The criminal charges against Brennan were soon dropped.

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.

Fugitive Fathers: How the Vatican’s alleged sex abusers hide and preach in South America (VIDEO)

UNITED STATES/LATIN AMERICA
GlobalPost

South America has become a safe haven for the Catholic Church’s alleged child molesters

Will Carless Jimmy Chalk Rob Harris on Sep 17, 2015

But now, GlobalPost has investigated a disturbing new chapter to the story.

The Catholic Church has allowed priests accused of sexually abusing children in the United States and Europe to escape their pasts by moving to parishes in the poor, remote corners of the developing world. This despite ongoing pledges from a new pope to clean up the church’s record on abuse.

We spent the last year tracking down some of these fugitive fathers across South America — not far from the pope’s homeland. All but one of the men we found continue to work as priests, enjoying the privilege, respect and unfettered access to young people that comes with being a member of the clergy.

One of the priests admitted to GlobalPost that he had molested a 13-year-old boy, and acknowledged that he can never work again in the US. He continues to preach in a small Peruvian fishing village. Another is currently under investigation by authorities in Brazil for a string of alleged molestations, including accusations in the poor neighborhoods where for two decades he ran a home for street children — with the support of the Catholic Church.

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

South America has become a safe haven for the Catholic Church’s alleged child molesters

UNITED STATES/LATIN AMERICA
Global Post

Fugitive Fathers: How the Vatican’s alleged sex abusers hide and preach in South America (VIDEO)

Will Carless on Sep 17, 2015

Jennifer’s memories were scattered and fleeting. They came suddenly, triggered by a smell or a glimpse of light dappled through stained glass. The aroma of freshly baked mince pies repulsed her nostrils. Scented candles, like the ones in the small San Antonio, Texas church she attended as an elementary school girl, made her gag with disgust.

Jennifer’s mother couldn’t understand these abrupt fits of revulsion, or the angry outbursts that accompanied them. For years, her daughter had been slipping into chaos, flunking classes, running with a bad crowd. The once happy-go-lucky child had changed beyond all recognition.
Then, one day, years after her life began unraveling, it all came pouring out.

“She finally came and told me that he had raped her,” the girl’s mother told GlobalPost. Therapy had dragged up Jennifer’s memories: a sudden blacking out, possibly from a drug she had been slipped, then dizzily regaining consciousness on a bed in the rectory. “I remember when I came to, it was just him and me and he was on top of me and I remember that stained-glass window and he did it in front of the Blessed Sacrament,” Jennifer told her mother.

*****
Jennifer — who is identified only by her first name because she still suffers trauma from the alleged incident — is by no means the only parishioner to accuse Father Federico Fernandez Baeza of abuse.

Fernandez arrived in San Antonio in the early 1980s. By 1983, prosecutors had charged him with exposing himself to two young girls in a local swimming pool. A year later, he had begun ritually abusing and raping two young boys in his care, according to a 1988 lawsuit filed by a local family. The abuse continued for two years, the lawsuit claimed.

The priest was never convicted of a crime. Instead the church negotiated a large cash settlement, and Fernandez promptly relocated to Colombia, where he continued working for the Catholic Church. In May, GlobalPost traced him to the picturesque seaside city of Cartagena. He’s currently a senior administrator and priest at a prestigious Catholic university, enjoying all the privilege, respect and unfettered access to young people that comes with being a member of the clergy. …

Last year, Pope Francis ostensibly took the US church’s policy global when he wrote a letter to every Catholic bishop in the world stating that they must abide by the zero tolerance rules.

But victim advocates say the pope’s message was an exercise in public relations, and that meaningful change is still a long way off.

Anne Barrett-Doyle is a founder of BishopAccountability.org, which tracks abusive priests around the world. She said that despite the pope’s letter, it’s still entirely unclear what standards bishops worldwide are now being held to. She said the rules in the US, though far from perfect, remain much more stringent than church doctrine elsewhere.

“It’s a lie, it’s absolutely false that there’s anything approaching zero tolerance in the emerging abuse policies around the world,” Barrett-Doyle 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.

All Things In the Light: Our Talk with Amy Smith from Watchkeep

UNITED STATES
Outsiders Podcast

[with audio]

by Scott Matkovich | Sep 16, 2015

Abuse Brought Out Into the Light

This is probably one of the most important and yet difficult shows we have done in the past year. We first learned about Amy and her ministry about six months ago through Twitter and through our conversation with earlier guests. One of the great things about doing a podcast like this is that we get introduced to many different branches of evangelical and progressive Christianity.

Personally, I would have never guessed that starting a podcast would be akin to taking a masters’ course in religious culture, but that’s exactly what it has turned out to be. As we dove into this adventure our eyes have been opened to a lot of great things that the people of Christ have been doing. But, as we are reminded nearly every month, there is also a subversive, fraudulent manifestation of “church”. It’s one that uses the same labels, titles, and authority structures, not to lead people into a life with God, but rather to manipulate and often abuse them.

After our first show on spiritual abuse with Dale Fincher, we marveled at how widespread and epidemic this problem is, and continues to be. Our hope with this show isn’t to defame the church, but to call all of those who are good to look up and around.

The epidemic of abuse in the church has been going on for far too long. We are thankful that Amy has made it her mission to bring these tales of abuse into the light. Take a listen to this podcast, get educated, and then act.

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.

Iglesia invoca “secreto canónico” …

CHILE
The Clinic

[The Archbishop of Santiago invoked the secrecy provisions of the Code of Canon Law to reject the display of documents in its file as part of the lawsuit filed by victims of the priest Fernando Karadima and substance minister Court Appeals of Santiago, Juan Manuel Muñoz Pardo.]

Iglesia invoca “secreto canónico” para no entregar archivos del Arzobispado que víctimas de Karadima piden incluir en juicio

Jorge Molina Sanhueza 16 Septiembre, 2015

El Arzobispado de Santiago invocó el secreto que establece el Código de Derecho Canónico, para rechazar la exhibición de documentos que obran en su archivo, en el marco de la demanda presentada por las víctimas del sacerdote Fernando Karadima y que sustancia el ministro de la Corte de Apelaciones de Santiago, Juan Manuel Muñoz Pardo.

De esta manera, el abogado Nicolás Luco, en representación de la Iglesia rechazó la solicitud hecha por los representantes de las víctimas el pasado 10 de septiembre. La respuesta del Arzobispado la publica íntegramente The Clinic Online.

De acuerdo a esta última, los demandantes solicitaron la exhibición de documentos que consten en el archivo, algunos de los cuales, según la iglesia, “han de ser custodiados bajo secreto”.

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.

Arzobispado aduce “secreto canónico” para negar entrega de archivos en caso Caradima

CHILE
24 Horas

[The Santiago archbishop is refusing to turn on files regarding priest Fernando Karadima requested by the appeals court. The archbishop said the files are under the canonical “secret.”]

El arzobispado de Santiago adujo que los archivos que las víctimas del sacerdote Fernando Karadima solicitaron a través de un recurso en la Corte de Apelaciones son parte del “secreto canónico”, por lo que rechazó entregarlas.

A través de un texto redactado por el abogado de la institución, Nicolás Luco, se solicita al ministro de fuero en el caso “rechazar íntegramente la petición de exhibición de documentos”, informó el medio The Clinic.

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.

Napier priest John Tovey jailed for indecent assault of young woman

NEW ZEALAND
The Dominion Post

MARTY SHARPE
September 17 2015

A former Anglican priest jailed for indecent assault has told a judge he is “truly repentant”.

John Tovey was sentenced to 15 months’ jail in Napier District Court on Wednesday morning after pleading guilty to two charges of indecent assault.

The offending occurred in Napier between April last year and January 2.

Tovey, 64, was previously a vicar in North Canterbury and a priest-in-charge at Churton Park in Wellington for five years, and then in Wainuiomata for 10 years, before moving to Hawke’s Bay in 2010, where he became associate priest at All Saints parish in Taradale.

He held the position until late 2011.

The church suspended Tovey’s permission to officiate indefinitely, meaning he is not licensed or authorised to undertake any priestly duties.

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.

Rabbi’s views again aired at abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

AAP

The controversial views of a rabbi who said Jewish leaders should not report offenders to police and complained about media hype around victims have again been aired before the sex abuse royal commission.

The commission sat on Thursday to hear oral submissions in response to recommended findings arising out of an earlier hearing into how ultra-orthodox Jewish centres and schools responded to abuse allegations.

The recommended findings have not yet been made public but parties in the February hearing in Melbourne have been given an opportunity to respond.

Greg Smith SC, representing Rabbi Yosef Feldman, submitted that the focus during the February hearing on the personal views of his client went beyond the commission’s terms of reference.

And that recommended findings against Rabbi Feldman by Maria Gerace, counsel assisting the commission, did not take into account the fact he had learned lessons since.

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.

Spotlight, the Catholic Sex-Abuse Drama, Is a Worst-to-First Triumph

UNITED STATES
GQ

By Scott Tobias

In the 16 years I’ve been attending the Toronto International Film Festival, Tom McCarthy’s The Cobbler may be the single worst movie I’ve seen here. And during that time, I’m typically seeing four or five movies a day over seven to ten days, so conservatively speaking, I’ve seen somewhere around 500 movies. Many of them are terrible: Bloated awards-trawlers, impenetrable navel-gazers, “discoveries” by first-time/last-time directors, and those random slot-fillers that yield a masterpiece two percent of the time and a dud the other ninety-eight. But The Cobbler was a special kind of misfire, a magical realist comedy featuring unsettling racial overtones, Adam Sandler at his most clinically depressed, and a shocking series of third-act misjudgments.

As I wrote at the time, “The Cobbler is a paradox: A film that must be seen to be believe, but mustn’t be seen.” One year later, however, McCarthy is back with Spotlight, a gripping account of the Boston Globe’s comprehensive investigation of child sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic Church, and among people who report on Best Picture frontrunners, it has been declared the Best Picture frontrunner. As worst-to-first comebacks go, pick your analogy: The 1991 Minnesota Twins, ’80s Neil Young to ’90s Neil Young, 1941 to Raiders of the Lost Ark. It’s tempting to say that The Cobbler is the sort of terrible movie that only a great director could make, but McCarthy isn’t some cinematic visionary. His other films—The Station Agent, The Visitor, and Win Win—are all small-scale, accessible, meat-and-potatoes dramas that rely on well-honed performances and empathetic storytelling. With The Cobbler, he made the mistake of trying to sing in a higher octave.

Spotlight plays to his strengths. As scripted by McCarthy and Josh Singer, the film succeeds first and foremost in bringing order to an extremely complex piece of team reporting. The “Spotlight” team of investigative journalists at the Globe—played here by Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, and Brian d’Arcy James—are not merely compiling cases of abuse within the Church, but working to expose a cover-up that goes all the way to Cardinal Law and beyond. And they’re doing it in a tribalist city where the Church wields influence over every institution, including the newspaper, which can ill-afford to alienate its Catholic subscriber base. The reporting had to be methodical and the assertions bulletproof—otherwise, the paper would be buried in hate mail and lawsuits at a time when the entire industry was starting to slip.

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.

Second Adass Israel School student to sue after $1m abuse payout

AUSTRALIA
The Age

September 17, 2015

Patrick Hatch
Reporter for The Age

A second former Adass Israel Girls School student is suing over sexual abuse allegedly suffered at the hands of the school’s fugitive principal.

On Wednesday the school was ordered in Melbourne’s Supreme Court to pay over a million dollars in compensation to a woman for abuse she suffered at the school.

The court heard the woman, now 28, was regularly abused by former principal Malka Leifer between 2003 and 2006 at the school in Elsternwick, at the principal’s home and on school camps.

Justice Jack Rush found the abuse had a profound effect of the on the woman, included flashbacks, nightmares and persistent depression.

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.

Five face trial over historic Falkland school abuse charges

SCOTLAND
Fife Today

Five men will stand trial next year accused of abusing pupils at a school run by the Christian Brothers in Fife between 1970 and 1983.

The men, aged between 61 and 77. are accused of physically and sexually abusing boys at the former St Ninian’s School in Falkland.

The accused are John Farrell, 72, Paul Kelly, 63, Edward Egan, 77, Michael Murphy, 75, and William Don, 61, from Leven. They all deny the charges against them and have lodged pleas of not guilty.

On Wednesday at the High Court in Glasgow only Farrell was present when the trial date was set. The others were excused attendance.

Judge Lord Burns said: “The indictment runs to 23 pages and there are slightly less than 130 charges.’’

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

The Plight of Children at Risk …

UNITED STATES
Verdict

The Plight of Children at Risk in the Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Communities and the Failure of Government and Pandering Politicians to Protect Them

Marci A. Hamilton

Children in the United States are routinely sacrificed on the pyre of their parents’ faith by pandering politicians without a moral compass. Children don’t vote but insular religious communities often vote as a bloc mandated by the male officials at the top, and that fact is not lost on power-hungry politicians like those in Utah who let the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (FLDS) patriarchs marry off girls and abandon boys so that the men will have a better place in heaven. The same relationship between elected officials and the ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities exists: there are known risks to children but these politicians look the other way as they are feted by the rabbis and a community that keeps children at risk.

It is the time of year when Jews observe a series of important religious holidays beginning with Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. I submit this column as a subject to be pondered in the midst of celebration and reflection.

As with the FLDS, the ultra-Orthodox communities have put children at risk due to inadequate medical treatment, educational neglect, and mostly undeterred child sex abuse. In an interesting twist, the gender most severely affected in this community is male. Boys are at risk of herpes infection from metzitzah b’peh, or MBP and boys are less educated than girls because their education is focused on the Torah rather than secular subjects. Both, however, are at risk of sexual abuse. As in every community, that risk is significantly higher for the girls than the boys. Therefore, boys and girls in this community need prompt attention from the authorities, and politicians pandering for bloc votes need a conscience check. …

Sex Abuse: Weak District Attorneys Put Children at Risk

Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes was widely criticized for his failure to prosecute child sex abusers in the ultra-Orthodox communities for political reasons. It was a primary reason he lost to Kenneth Thompson, the current Brooklyn D.A. Last month, 107 rabbis signed a public statement agreeing to report child sex abuse directly to the authorities, with some arguably part of the ultra-Orthodox community.

Agudath Israel, however, is notably silent on the issue. The community also has engaged in extreme practices to persuade those that do come forward to be quiet as I discuss here. Thompson has cut some sweetheart deals with defendants from the community that led many who had championed his cause to wonder if he will make a difference for the children being sexually abused in the faith, for good reason.

For example, witness-tampering is usually deeply disfavored by prosecutors, and Thompson did initiate an investigation into it in the Lebovits sex abuse trial in April 2015. Yet, the investigation was closed without prosecution. The victims of child sex abuse in this community desperately need a champion in law enforcement.

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.

Catholicism’s American revolution

UNITED STATES
Catholic Herald (UK)

by Stephen White
posted Thursday, 17 Sep 2015

From annulments to pro-life activism the American Church is blazing a trail for the rest of the Catholic world

In a few days Pope Francis will make his first visit to the United States. He will meet President Obama. He will address a joint session of Congress (something no pontiff has ever done). He will give an address to the United Nations in New York. Every word of his, scripted and unscripted, will be parsed for its political significance. Every gesture will be studied, scrutinised and spun. Cranks will complain, pundits will opine. The Holy Father’s visit is being treated with all the hype and gamesmanship of a major political campaign event.

And that, in part, is understandable. This visit – this Pope visiting at this particular time – ought to be big news, and it will necessarily disturb the already turbulent waters of American politics.

Experience suggests that Pope Francis is unlikely to steer completely clear of neuralgic political issues. He doesn’t mind causing a ruckus now and then. But his is an apostolic visit – he comes as an apostle, a messenger, a successor of Peter. He visits as a pastor, first and foremost, and Catholics must not forget this, even if everyone else does.

Francis comes at a critical time for the Church in the United States, and for the 70 million or so Catholics who live in the country. The Church’s future is filled with promise and doubt, hope and confusion, division and resilience. The self-inflicted wounds of the sexual abuse crisis are far from healed, yet the Church here has dealt with the scourge better than almost any institution in the world.

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.

Do the Pope’s Synod Picks Signal Support for Controversial Agendas?

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

NEWS ANALYSIS: The full list of delegates, released yesterday by the Vatican, is fuelling concerns about the possible direction of next month’s meeting.

by EDWARD PENTIN 09/16/2015

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican yesterday published a full list of participants for October’s Ordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family, in which those pushing for Church reform in pastoral practice figure highly, especially among those personally chosen by the Holy Father.

In the view of observers who are concerned that the synod might endorse controversial approaches that could compromise Church teachings on matters like divorce and homosexuality, the list of papal choices appear skewed in favor of delegates who appear inclined to support such ideas.

And, as expected, U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke, who spearheaded resistance to last year’s efforts to advance those agendas at the Extraordinary Synod of Bishops on the Family, has been omitted from the final list.

In total, 279 bishops from well over 100 nations will be attending, underlining the international nature of the meeting, which will run Oct. 4-25.

The meeting, with the official theme of “The Vocation and the Mission of the Family in the Church and in the Contemporary World,” follows last year’s synod that was marred by controversy and allegations of manipulation.

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

Catholic Church: Leap of faith

UNITED STATES
Financial Times

James Politi and Lindsay Whipp

Pope Francis raises hopes he will reverse the decline in the US Church on his first visit to America

After mass last Sunday at St Mary’s church in Riverside, a leafy, affluent suburb west of Chicago, Kate Boharic, 66, emerged into the sunshine with her husband Bob.

The service was well-attended: the pews were three-quarters full, and the congregation spanned all generations. Ms Boharic believes Pope Francis’ impending trip to the US could encourage lapsed Catholics to return to the church.

This month, the 78-year-old Argentine pontiff took two steps that were seen by reformers as crucial to reviving the fortunes of US Catholicism, which has been shedding followers for years.

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.

New bishop called to heal diocese wounded by sexual abuse scandal

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

Editorial

James V. Johnston Jr., the newly named Catholic bishop of the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese, is completely on record about some of society’s most divisive issues.

He opposes the death penalty. He also vocally opposes same-sex marriage. These are long-held positions of Catholic leaders in Missouri, certain to satisfy some and alienate others.

But Johnston isn’t coming here to be a politician. His task is to heal a diocese that has been wounded by clergy sexual abuse scandals and the rigid stances of the previous bishop, Robert Finn.

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.

Author, sex abuse victim is raring to take on the pope

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Register

BY THERESA WALKER / STAFF WRITER

On the day that longtime Subway spokesman Jared Fogle admitted to having had sex with minors and possessing child pornography, Joelle Casteix’s phone started ringing before 5 a.m.

Media outlets seeking the perspective of a survivor of child sexual abuse knew to contact the 44-year-old mom in Newport Beach, known for her advocacy and incisive – sometimes blunt – commentary.

So as her husband and 9-year-old son slept, Casteix swung into action, talking to reporters over the next six hours.

That was last month. September is even busier for Casteix (pronounced cass-tix). She’s got a new book to promote. And Pope Francis will visit the United States, meaning she’ll be busy speaking out about the church and sexual abuse.

Casteix was victimized by a former choir director at Mater Dei High when she was a student at the Santa Ana school in the late 1980s.

She emerged in 2003 as one of the Catholic Church’s most outspoken critics during the height of the civil lawsuits filed against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orange by victims of predators in the priesthood and the laity. …

PROTESTING THE POPE

Casteix – a photogenic brunette who likes to ski, enjoys a good glass of wine, and is training for a half-marathon – is heading to New York next week for the visit of Pope Francis. She’ll be joined by other critics of church action on clergy abuse.

She and other advocates say the Vatican continues to fall short of complete transparency and true zero tolerance in addressing the Catholic Church’s decades-long coverup of pedophile clergy abuse that left thousands of children victimized.

Casteix says her goal is to counter what she calls “the Francis effect.”

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.

Prosecution rests in sex abuse trial against Windber priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Paul Peirce
Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015

Federal prosecutors rested their case Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Johnstown in the criminal trial of a Somerset County Catholic priest accused of traveling to Honduras to have sex with orphaned boys under the guise of doing charity work.

Judge Kim Gibson instructed the jury of seven men and five women to return to court at 1:30 p.m. Thursday to begin hearing the defense for the priest, the Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio of Windber.

Maurizio, 70, was the pastor of Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Central City until his arrest Sept. 25 on multiple federal charges.

Maurizio is accused of traveling to Central America for his self-run nonprofit, Humanitarian Interfaith Ministries, between 2004 to 2009 to have sex with boys at a mission orphanage.

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.

Maurizio attorney: Dismiss charges

PENNSYLVANIA
The Altoona Mirror

By Phil Ray (pray@altoonamirror.com) , The Altoona Mirror

September 17, 2015

JOHNSTOWN – After the prosecution in the child sexual abuse trial of the Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio Jr. rested its case Wednesday afternoon, the lead defense counsel, Steven P. Passarello of Altoona, asked the judge to dismiss all the charges that have been holding the 70-year-old priest behind bars for the past year.

One of the alleged victims recanted his testimony. The date of the alleged abuse of a second victim was wrongfully charged by the government and the charges for a third victim had not been proven, Passarello argued.

Photographs found in Maurizio’s computer of minors either nude or only partially clothed could not be linked to Maurizio, the defense attorney said.

Several people had access to the computer at Our Lady Queen of Angels Parish in Central City, Somerset County, and the government did not show Maurizio ever looked at the photos, Passarello said as he contested a charge of possession of child pornography.

The government charged Maurizio with three counts of money laundering because he allegedly ordered funds from his charity, Humanitarian or Honduran Interfaith Ministries (it is known under both names), be sent to ProNino United States and then transferred to the ProNino orphanage in El Progreso, Honduras, for Maurizio’s use as “spending money” when he made his annual trips there.

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

University refuses to strip honorary degree from disgraced Cardinal O’Brien

SCOTLAND
National Secular Society

Thu, 17 Sep 2015

St Andrew’s University has rejected attempts to strip Cardinal Keith O’Brien of an honorary degree, despite his role in blocking an inquiry into sex abuse and his admission of sexual misconduct.

A campaign by Manfredi La Manna, an academic at St Andrew’s, to have O’Brien stripped of his honorary degree in divinity has been rebuffed by university authorities, who said it would be “no more than an empty gesture”.

In response, Dr La Manna asked “how low should an honorand’s behaviour sink” before a degree is revoked.

Cardinal O’Brien admitted in 2013 that his “sexual conduct” had “fallen beneath the standards expected of me” after a series of allegations about him were made public. One priest who came forward to expose O’Brien’s conduct described him as a “predator”.

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.

September 16, 2015

Abuse victim gives opinion on new KC-St.Joseph Bishop

KANSAS CITY (MO)
YouTube

Abuse survivor Michael Sandridge said he believes the newly appointed bishop is a disappointing choice.

41 Action News, KSHB, brings you the latest news, weather and investigative reports from both sides of the state line.

We are Kansas City’s Breaking News leader, bringing you the area’s most accurate forecast and the latest sports coverage from KC’s best team.

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

Longtime KC area leader of priest sex abuse victims’ group dies at 66

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

BY JUDY L. THOMAS
jthomas@kcstar.com

Mike Hunter, who for more than two decades was the voice of clergy sexual abuse victims in the Kansas City area, died Tuesday after suffering a heart attack last month.

Hunter, 66, had served as head of the local chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests since 1992 and was among the longest-serving local SNAP leaders in the country.

Those who worked with Hunter described him as a soft-spoken, humble man and an excellent listener who did not judge others. Though he didn’t feel comfortable doing interviews, he served as a spokesman for the organization and often was seen at news conferences and vigils displaying large photographs of young sexual abuse victims.

“He was one of the most kindhearted and generous and compassionate people I’ve ever met,” said David Clohessy, SNAP’s national director.

Hunter, a lifelong Kansas City area resident and musician who for many years owned Keith Coldsnow Artists Supply in Westport, kept a spiral notebook filled with notes and phone numbers of hundreds of victims who had contacted him over the years.

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.

Acceso al Te Deum de Osorno será con invitación y controlado por Carabineros

CHILE
El Vaca Nudo

[Access to the Independence DayTe Deum is Osorno is by invitation only and will be controlled by police. The appointment and subsequent inauguration of Juan Barros Madrid as Bishop of Osorno has convulsed the city since it is alleged he knew about abuse by priest Fernando Karadima and did nothing about it.]

La designación y posterior toma de posesión de Juan Barros Madrid como Obispo de Osorno ha convulsionado a la ciudad y no existe oportunidad alguna en que sus detractores no aprovechen para manifestar su disconformidad ante la nominación de uno de los señalados como posibles encubridores en el caso Karadima.

Y esta situación es la que las autoridades están previendo que pueda ocurrir en el Te Deum que se realizará este viernes a las 10 de la mañana en la Catedral de Osorno, dado el antecedente de lo que ocurrió en la toma de posesión de Barros el 21 de marzo pasado.

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.

Bust of abuser-bishop removed from chancery

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Elizabeth A. Elliott | Sep. 16, 2015

KANSAS CITY, MO.
The Knoxville diocese has removed from a historical display a life-size bronze bust of the founding bishop of its diocese, who admitted to sexually abusing teenage boys in 2002, but photos of the bishop remain in the display and at the local Catholic high school.

Questions about the bust and photo surfaced yesterday when the former chancellor of the Knoxville diocese was named the new bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Mo.

James Johnston, currently bishop of Springfield-Cape Girardeau, was chancellor in Knoxville in 2004 when advocates for victims of childhood sexual abuse urged the Knoxville diocese to remove a life-size bronze bust of Bishop Anthony O’Connell from a prominent place in the Knoxville chancery and to remove a photo portrait of the former bishop from Knoxville Catholic High School.

The displays weren’t removed, and when asked about the public display of image of the admitted abuser of minors, Johnston told NCR that he found nothing inappropriate with the historical displays.

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.

Advocates for abuse victims want pope to investigate Cardinal Burke

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WXOW

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — –
Priests, nuns and canon lawyers who advocate for clergy sex abuse victims urged Pope Francis, on the eve of his U.S. visit, to investigate the child protection records of Cardinal Justin Rigali, the former archbishop of Philadelphia, and Cardinal Raymond Burke, who led dioceses in Wisconsin and Missouri.

The group, which calls itself the Catholic Whistleblowers, wants an inquiry of Rigali, who was Philadelphia archbishop from 2003 to 2011 and retired amid an uproar over grand jury allegations that he was keeping about three dozen suspected abusers in ministry. His successor, Archbishop Charles Chaput, has removed several priests from church work since he took over.

The advocates are also calling for an investigation of Burke, who led the Diocese of La Crosse, Wisconsin, and the Archdiocese of St. Louis before leaving for Rome to lead the Vatican’s highest court. The advocates have accused him of insensitive treatment of victims and their families.

The Rev. James Connell, a canon lawyer and member of the group, said that in La Crosse, Burke used a very strict definition in canon law to evaluate abuse cases – equivalent to guilty beyond a reasonable doubt – instead of a lesser standard called for in the U.S. bishops’ own policies, and therefore left abusers in ministry.

“I think the church would like people to think this is over, this is finished, we’ve handled it,” said Sister Maureen Paul Turlish of Delaware, a member of the advocacy group, who spoke at the news conference Wednesday in Philadelphia. “It’s not true. It’s not over.”

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.

Advocacy Group Calls For Inquiry Into Cardinal Regali’s Handling Of Abuse Scandal

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS Philly

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — An advocacy group for clergy sexual abuse victims is hoping Pope Francis’ newly established Vatican Tribunal will look into the role of Cardinal Justin Rigali, when he headed the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Father James Connell, a retired priest of the Milwaukee Archdiocese and a member of the Catholic Whistleblowers Steering Committee, says the Vatican court will not function unless people bring up specifics, like Cardinal Rigali’s handling of the abuse scandal.

Two grand juries presented scathing reports on his watch, in 2005 and 2011.

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.

PA–SNAP backs proposed investigation of Cardinals

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Sept. 16

SNAP backs proposed investigation of Cardinals
Group especially urges Vatican action vs. Burke

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

We applaud and support Catholic Whistleblowers in their push for Vatican action against two prelates who have protected predator priests. We especially urge top Catholic officials to investigate and discipline Cardinal Raymond Burke.

While in St. Louis, Burke was often reckless, deceptive and callous regarding predator priests, vulnerable kids and wounded victims. He expanded the troubling practice of importing sexually troubled priests from across the US, letting some of them work in local parishes and letting others stay in church facilities that are secretive and careless about public safety.

To Catholics and victims hoping for a more compassionate, responsive and responsible church hierarchy, this move is distressing.

St. Louis Archdiocese Importing Predatory Priests

Under Archbishop Raymond Burke, dozens of proven, admitted, and credibly accused predator priests have been sent to St. Louis. Some live in church facilities, others don’t. At least three worked recently in city parishes and one works now at a local Catholic college. None of them, SNAP feels, are adequately supervised and in virtually no case did church officials notify parishioners or the public about these potentially dangerous clerics.

(The following information is far from complete or comprehensive. It is almost strictly based on public documents: police records, litigation, news accounts, etc.)

1) Proven, admitted or credibly accused priests sent here to work or disclosed as working here in recent years.

— Bryce
Even now, Fr. Vincent W. Bryce works and lives on the campus of (or directly across the street from) St. Louis University, despite the fact that he admitted molesting a child.

[OakPark.com]

In December 2007, a Chicago area newspaper disclosed that he works in the library at the Aquinas Institute. (SNAP has and has shared with local news media copies of a 2002 letter from his supervisor confirming that Bryce admitted the abuse.)

In 2002, Bryce resigned from two parishes in the Grand Rapids Michigan Diocese.

[BishopAccountability.org]

This took place after Bryce was confronted about his crimes by church authorities who had learned of it through St. Paul attorney Jeff Anderson. A settlement was paid to the victim.

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.

Key Witness Recants in Pennsylvania Priest’s Child Sex Trial

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC News

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. — Sep 16, 2015

A key witness in the trial of a Pennsylvania priest charged with traveling to Honduras to molest poor street children during missionary trips has recanted on the stand.

The 24-year-old man testified in a federal courtroom in Johnstown that he was never molested by the Rev. Joseph Maurizio despite prosecution claims that he had been as a 14-year-old boy.

The witness acknowledged accusing the 70-year-old priest during a previous interview with investigators but on Tuesday said he felt pressured to make the accusations. He also testified that Maurizio’s attorney tried to get him into the U.S. to testify in the priest’s favor at an earlier proceeding, but U.S. Embassy officials prevented him from getting a visa.

The Associated Press does not identify people who may be victims of sexual assaults.

Two other Honduran men did testify that the priest abused them, however.

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.