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.

October 24, 2015

Catholic society rocked by sexual abuse allegations in Peru

PERU
Peru Reports

Peru’s attorney general has opened a sexual abuse investigation into Luis Fernando Figari, founder of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (SCV) apostolic society.

Attorney general Pablo Sanchez said that a 60-day investigation was opened in wake of the revelations. However any crimes committed before 2004 would be ineligible for prosecution under Peru’s statute of limitations.

Last Sunday investigative news program Cuarto Poder featured a first look at the new book, “Half Monks, Half Soldiers” by journalists Pedro Salinas and Paola Ugaz. 30 former members alleged widespread sexual and psychological abuse within SCV. Three men who claimed to be abused by Figari himself.

“At times I literally felt nauseous, on the point of tears,” author Pedro Salinas said about writing the book. “Because they are such shocking testimonies, especially those who allege sexual abuse, that I doubt anyone would be unfazed. They are traumas people have carried with them for years, that cost them a lot to recount.”

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

I watch child pornography to prosecute sex crimes. The kids’ silence is deafening.

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Sarah Chang October 23

Sarah Chang is a federal prosecutor who specializes in child exploitation crimes.

During my first week as a federal prosecutor of sexual abuse crimes against children, one of my colleagues told me her chief coping mechanism: Turn the sound off when you have to watch a video multiple times. This advice scared me. I imagined children screaming, crying and shrieking in pain — the stuff of nightmares.

My office is responsible for investigating and prosecuting such crimes, namely the production, possession and trafficking of child pornography. My first case file contained multiple CDs and DVDs showing a young girl being sexually abused by her father, who filmed his crimes with a handheld camera. Despite my colleague’s warning, I knew I couldn’t remain deaf during my first pass at the evidence. I went to our forensic computer lab and braced myself.

But all I heard was silence. The 5-year-old girl said nothing — not even a sob. Disturbed, I continued to watch each video with the sound on. I tried to beat back the silence by turning the volume up as high as it could go. The quiet was too deafening, too defeating to accept. Surely, these children must make a sound?

But in video after video, I witnessed silent suffering. I later learned that this is a typical reaction of young sexual abuse victims. Psychiatrists say the silence conveys their sense of helplessness, which also manifests in their reluctance to report the incidents and their tendency to accommodate their abusers. If children do disclose their abuse, their reports are often ambivalent, sometimes followed by a complete retraction and a return to silence.

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

Former Scout leader, religion teacher, admits possessing child porn

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Tom Haydon | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on October 23, 2015

LINDEN — From all appearances, Gregory Aker was solid member of his community, an assistant scoutmaster with the Boy Scouts in Clark and a volunteer religion teachers at a Linden church.

All that changed in February 2014 when Linden police responded to a domestic complaint between Aker and his wife, and then arrested the husband on charges of sexually assaulting two minors. That was followed by federal authorities searching the home and finding 600 images and dozens of videos of child sexual abuse, authorities said.

Today Aker appeared in U.S. District Court in Newark and admitted sexually abusing children and possessing images of child sexual abuse, U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman said in a statement.

Aker, now 46, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Court Judge Susan D. Wigenton to a charge of possession of child pornography.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Venezia il film sulla pedofilia nella diocesi di Boston

ROMA
Radio Vaticana

[con l’audio]

E’ stato presentato ieri sera fuori concorso alla Mostra del Cinema di Venezia uno dei film più attesi, “Spotlight” con il quale il regista statunitense Thomas McCarty ripercorre la storia della famosa inchiesta che nel 2002 portò alla luce lo scandalo e l’orrore della pedofilia tra i sacerdoti della diocesi di Boston. Dal nostro inviato a Venezia, Luca Pellegrini:

Proprio mentre a New York crollavano, in quel fatidico 2001, le Twin Towers centrate dagli aerei civili, portando con sé nel baratro centinaia di vittime innocenti, nella Boston cattolica le fondamenta di quella grande e antica diocesi cedevano non perché attaccate da qualche forma di terrorismo umano, ma dalla forza inesauribile e incontenibile della verità. Non secondario il fatto che fosse un manipolo di validi giornalisti del quotidiano “Boston Globe” a rendersi interpreti della loro più pura vocazione, quella cioè di trovare i fatti, verificare le fonti, raccontarli e rendersi, per il bene della comunità e di una città, paladini di un bisogno di giustizia. Grazie all’unità Spotlight – da qui il titolo del film di McCarty – il 6 gennaio del 2002 solennità dell’Epifania, una data scelta non a caso, uscì un numero storico del giornale che in prima pagina scoperchiava l’orrore già in parte noto e troppo a lungo da molti taciuto, quello della pedofilia diffusa tra i sacerdoti cattolici della diocesi americana, con centinaia di vittime sulla coscienza non solo di chi il crimine l’aveva operato, ma anche di chi lo aveva nascosto, ancor peggio negato.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Radio praises movie on Boston Globe coverage of clergy abuse

ROME
Crux

[A Venezia il film sulla pedofilia nella diocesi di Boston – Radio Vaticana]

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor October 23, 2015

A new film about The Boston Globe’s coverage of child sexual abuse scandals in the Church 13 years ago has drawn strong praise from the Vatican’s official radio outlet, which described the movie as “honest” and “compelling.”

A Vatican Radio commentator also said the Globe’s reporting, upon which the film is based, helped the Church in the United States “to accept fully the sin, to admit it publicly, and to pay all the consequences.”

Artistic commentary from either Vatican Radio or the official Vatican newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, is not tantamount to an endorsement of a work by either the pope or the Vatican, spokesmen have insisted over the years. Its appearance in a Vatican media outlet, however, creates at least the impression of approval.

Directed by Thomas McCarthy, the movie takes its title, “Spotlight,” from the name of the investigative unit at the Globe that documented a widespread pattern of abuse and cover-up in the Archdiocese of Boston, which eventually led to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law in December 2003.

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

Lawsuit Accuses San Ramon School, Alamo Church Of Failing To Deter Molestation

CALIFORNIA
CBS SF Bay Area

SAN RAMON (CBS SF) — A teen and his mother are seeking more than $25,000 in damages based on allegations in a lawsuit filed last week that a San Ramon school district and an Alamo church failed to deter child molestation by reporting it to police.

The lawsuit, filed in Contra Costa County Superior Court, names San Ramon Valley Unified School District and New Life Church as defendants. The plaintiff is a 16-year-old boy that was identified as one of three victims in a sexual abuse case.

The plaintiff was a victim in a case brought against Kevin Lopez, a former California High School head wrestling coach and a youth group program leader at New Life Church.

Lopez, 28, was sentenced in February to 10 years, eight months in prison after pleading guilty to eight felony counts of lewd acts on children between the ages of 14 and 15 and other related 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.

Church accused of systematic failings after sixth abuser in two years unmasked

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

A SEXUAL abuse victim has accused the Church of “systematic behaviour” in failing to act on allegations of assault after the sixth Sussex churchman in two years was exposed as an offender .

The claim comes after it was revealed on Thursday that former Bishop of Chichester George Bell, a man once tipped to be Archbishop of Canterbury, sexually abused a young child for a number of years.

Campaigners are now questioning the Diocese of Chichester’s ability to investigate itself, as historic cases continue to emerge despite five separate inquiries.

Additionally an inquiry into the Church’s handling of the Peter Ball case was commissioned on October 5 and the diocese is also co-operating with the national Goddard review into child sexual abuse.

Yesterday there was no clarification from the current Bishop of Chichester, Martin Warner, following his comment that there had been no cover up by the 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.

Lawsuit alleges San Ramon school district, Alamo church didn’t take proper steps to deter molestation

CALIFORNIA
KRON

SAN RAMON (BCN) — A teen and his mother are seeking more than $25,000 in damages based on allegations in a lawsuit filed last week that a San Ramon school district and an Alamo church failed to deter child molestation by reporting it to police.

The lawsuit, filed in Contra Costa County Superior Court, names San Ramon Valley Unified School District and New Life Church as defendants. The plaintiff is a 16-year-old boy that was identified as one of three victims in a sexual abuse case.

The plaintiff was a victim in a case brought against Kevin Lopez, a former California High School head wrestling coach and a youth group program leader at New Life Church. Lopez, 28, was sentenced in February to 10 years, eight months in prison after pleading guilty to eight felony counts of lewd acts on children between the ages of 14 and 15 and other related charges.

And, the lawsuit alleges, the school district and the church might have known Lopez was engaging in this behavior with minors before police were alerted, but didn’t respond to it.

The lawsuit maintains that the district instead conducted its own investigation into a complaint that Lopez had potentially molested children, and made no further action.

It was a concerned parent’s accusation that while Lopez himself was a student at the school, he hosted parties with alcohol for middle school-aged children and may have inappropriately touched some of the minors.

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

October 23, 2015

Assignment Record– Rev. J. (James)Vincent Fitzgerald, O.M.I.

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: A priest of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate ordained in 1950 in Belleville IL, Fitzgerald moved in and out of a number of dioceses during his career, including Belleville, Springfield and Peoria IL, St. Paul and Minneapolis, Duluth, Crookston and New Ulm MN, Sioux Falls SD, and Springfield-Cape Girardeau MO. He was involved with orphanages in Peoria IL and Sisseton SD. He returned to his Order in Belleville sometime in the early 1990s and died in 2009. Fitzgerald was accused in a 2010 lawsuit of having repeatedly sexually abused two residents of the Tekakwitha Indian Orphanage in the 1960s: a girl ages 4-13, and a 10 or 11-year-old boy. In a February 2014 lawsuit Fitzgerald was accused of sexually abusing a 13-year-old boy in around 1978. He had met the boy while at a pastoral education program at a parish in the New Ulm diocese, and invited him to serve as an altar boy for two weeks at his Squaw Lake MN parish. It is during those two weeks that the abuse is said to have occurred. The lawsuit also claims Fitzgerald sexually abused another child during his time in Squaw Lake, on the Leech Lake Indian Reservation near Bemidji MN. A civil trial related to the lawsuit began in October 2015.

Born: December 9, 1919
Ordained: May 1950
Died: September 7, 2009

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Peruvian-based Catholic movement pledges inquiry after claims of abuse

PERU
National Catholic Reporter

Barbara Fraser Catholic News Service | Oct. 23, 2015

LIMA, PERU
Accusations of physical, psychological and sexual abuse by leaders of a Catholic movement founded here in the 1970s led the group to pledge an internal investigation.

The allegations were described in a new book, “Mitad Monjes, Mitad Soldados” (“Half Monks, Half Priests”), by Pedro Salinas, a former member of Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, who interviewed about 30 other former members.

The interviewees, some of whom were minors when they joined the group and moved into one of its formation houses, recalled military-style physical exercise and separation from family and friends. Some said spiritual directors had ordered them to disrobe and then touched them, and there were several accounts of rape. One of those accused is the organization’s founder, Luis Fernando Figari.

Figari resigned as head of Sodalitium in late 2010, after the organization withdrew its proposal for the beatification of its deceased former vicar general, German Doig, in the wake of sex abuse allegations.

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Sex offenders in the pews: Let’s not be deceived

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service – Rhymes with Religion

Boz Tchividjian | Oct 23, 2015

One of the many horrors about child sexual abuse is the inability to definitively assess who poses a danger to our children. Not only do decades of studies still leave us at a loss as to why offenders offend, but generations of abuse remind us that offenders are some of the most deceptive and dangerous people on the face of the earth. This combination is deadly. In order to help bring this horror to an end, we must acknowledge this deadly combination and help to equip our communities to understand so that all of us can be more proactive in protecting little ones from those inside and outside of our communities who want to destroy them.

I recently learned about an amazing individual who has committed his life to equipping the faith community to better understand the deceptions and dangers of offenders. Pastor Jimmy Hinton never grew up thinking that this would be his life’s calling. However, that all changed in 2011 when he was hit hard by a disclosure that forever changed his life. Pastor Hinton has spent the past few years collecting invaluable and unique insights into the dark mind of an offender who found himself loved and admired by an unsuspecting public that was deceived for decades. I am so glad and grateful that Jimmy Hinton has taken the time to share just a few of those insights with us today in this guest post. – Boz
_____________________________________________________________________________

It’s a cold February day and I’m standing on stage eyeing up my audience. It’s a seminar at a church on child sexual abuse and I’ve now shifted to speaking about prevention. I don’t want to lecture them about “red flag” behavior. I want them to experience deception. My colleague, a therapist who has logged over 9,000 hours counseling over 3,000 sex offenders in various prisons, has convinced me that we need to role play. He will play the firm church leader and I will play the pedophile. Days before, he assures me that he’s never seen anyone so naturally “get into role” as me. “It’s frightening! You’re too much,” he says. Our aim is to demonstrate to our unsuspecting audience how easily sex offenders cunningly win over the hearts of every person and gain access to children. It’s a scenario we both know too well. It will be, in his opinion, the most compelling and practical part of the entire weekend seminar. He was right.

We let them know that we were acting, but that several of them would find our routine eerily familiar. It’s a strange feeling to pretend to be the very thing you work so hard to fight against. Perhaps that’s why there is a profound shortage of specialists in this field. Nobody wants to plunge their minds into that level of darkness. Two minutes into my act, I could tell that most everyone was hooked. I improvised the entire thing. I had no idea what I was going to say or how I would say it but it just seemed to flow, and so did my tears. Several people in the audience were wiping tears from their own eyes, and we were only 3 minutes in. I used multiple layers of deception through words, pacing and leading, body language, and by hijacking and toying with their belief system. After only 5 minutes I was finished and, frankly, shocked at how easy it was. I asked the audience how many people would give me the benefit of the doubt and let me worship with them, unhindered. Every hand went up except for the church elders. One of the elders raised his hand—“We recently had a situation with a pedophile who gained our trust and eventually worked his way into a leadership position. Things got very ugly and it ended with him threatening lives. I swear, I had to take a second look and make sure that you were not actually that man standing on stage. You mirrored him exactly.” I had never met the man he spoke of, nor did I know any details about this church’s situation.

It’s a specialty I wish I didn’t need to develop, and I wish it wasn’t so personal. It’s taken its toll on me in so many ways, but I remain determined and understanding deception has become a niche. In 2011, a young adult disclosed to me, her pastor, that my own father had sexually abused her as a young child. Three days later, my mother and I were sitting in a police station reporting my childhood hero. How was this possible? I went into ministry because of his influence. He preached for decades at the same church I’m preaching at now. We were best friends. He confessed to over 20 victims, all of them prepubescent children at the time they were abused and is now serving a life sentence. I’ve maintained close contact with my dad, as well as the families of his victims. Learning about deception is woefully painful. Living in its wake is a nightmare.

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‘Farce’ and ‘verbiage’ behind the scenes at the Pope’s synod: an Aussie archbishop spills the beans

UNITED KINGDOM
The Spectator

Damian Thompson

Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane is one of the bishops who’ll be voting on the final report of the Synod on the Family at the Vatican tomorrow. He’s ‘quite a character’, I’m told by a priest who knows him. But anyone who’s been reading his startlingly frank and witty diary of the Synod, published on his diocesan website, will have already worked that out.

There are cardinals and bishops who, after a few jars, will let slip what really goes on at these occasions. And then there’s Archbishop Mark, who – although no doubt great company in the pub – doesn’t need any prompting to spill the beans.

He hasn’t broken any rules, mind. There are no leaks in his dispatches. But let’s just say that it’s lucky for him that Pope Francis doesn’t read English.

Coleridge’s latest entry, published today, is a gem. It’s a refreshing corrective to our mental image of cardinals wringing their hands in pious despair as they debate whether to give Holy Communion to the divorced and remarried. (They’ve decided against, by the way.)

Over to you, Archbishop:

We settled into the second round of voting for the Post-Synod Council which turned out to be a hoot. The first round of voting had been inconclusive, with votes scattering in all directions. This time we were given the names of the 10 bishops who had got the most votes in the first round in each of the four continental sections (Africa, America, Europe and Asia-Oceania). Of these we had to choose three.

Off we went, pressing our little voting machines at the seats. The trouble started when the technology failed in one of the three sections of the Hall. We were voting for Europe. We all agreed that Europe had always been a problem. Technicians were called and ran from all directions. I didn’t realise we had so many technicians looking after a system that is so erratic. It might be better to have a new system and fewer technicians … but the union mightn’t like that.

Enter the Secretary General of the Synod, Cardinal Lorenzo Baldisseri, whose finest hour this has not been. He handed the Fathers the draft of the final report:

The Secretary General then told us that it was our solemn duty to read the text carefully so that we could present proposed amendments the following morning. This was OK for those who know Italian. But the fact is that many of the bishops (and even some of the cardinals!) don’t know Italian … It would have taken a bit of money to hire professional translators to turn it into other languages quickly; but surely that would have been money well spent.

The fun and games started again when Cardinal Baldisseri told us that the draft document was so sensitive and super-secret that we couldn’t even take it home. At this, there were serious rumblings in the Hall. Boos were looming. Sensing mutiny, the Secretary General changed his mind: we could take it home but it was strictly for our eyes only. Not a whisper to anyone else. They weren’t even to know we had the document.

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Sinn Fein supports interim redress payments to victims of institutional abuse

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Sinn Fein has backed a call for interim compensation payouts to institutional abuse victims before a long-running inquiry into the crimes is completed.

However, the request for early payments has not yet been endorsed by the Office of First Minister and Deputy First Minister (OFMDFM), indicating Sinn Fein and the DUP have not reached a joint position on the issue.

Charity Survivors and Victims of Institutional Abuse (Savia) has warned that many former residents of institutions where abuse was committed are now old and cannot wait until the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIA) finishes hearing evidence and produces an official report to Stormont.

Sinn Fein’s Jennifer McCann, who is an OFMDFM junior minister, said: “Sinn Fein supports some form of interim redress or acknowledgement payment, as has happened in other jurisdictions, given the age profile of some of the victims of the Historical Abuse Inquiry.”

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Sodalicio colaborará con la justicia tras denuncia de abuso sexual

PERU
RPP

[The religious community apologized to the victims and said it will cooperate with any investigations in both ecclesiastical and judicial bodies.]

La comunidad religiosa pidió perdón a los afectados y aseguró que colaborará con las investigaciones en cualquiera de las instancias tanto eclesiásticas como judiciales.

Tras las denuncias de abusos sexuales contra el fundador del Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana, Luis Fernando Figari, la comunidad religiosa emitió un comunicado en el que piden perdón a las personas afectadas y aseguran que colaborarán con la justicia.

Del mismo modo, informan a la opinión pública que Figari se encuentra desde el 2010 en Roma en alejado de la vida pública.

“Expresamos nuestro profundo dolor y cercanía con todas aquellas personas que han sufrido y sufren por acciones cometidas por algunos de los miembros de nuestra comunidad. A ellas les pedimos perdón y les ofrecemos nuestra disposición de escucha y ayuda”, reza el comunicado.

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Violaciones sexuales cometidas por miembros del Sodalicio no han prescrito

PERU
La Ley

En caso de que las víctimas hayan sido menores de 14 años, aún podría procesarse y, eventualmente, condenarse a Luis Fernando Figari y otros miembros del Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana que sean hallados responsables de abuso sexual. Sacerdotes y autoridades religiosas no tienen ningún privilegio ante la ley penal. Más detalles aquí.

Un medio de comunicación ha afirmado que ya no sería posible condenar a Luis Fernando Figari (fundador) y otros miembros del Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (Sodalicio de Vida Cristiana) por los abusos sexuales cometidos contra menores de edad entre 1999 y 2000. ¿La razón? Se asegura que ya habrían prescrito los delitos por los cuales estos personajes han sido denunciados en recientes investigaciones periodísticas y en el libro “Mitad monjes, mitad soldados” de Pedro Salinas con la cooperación periodística de Paola Ugaz.

Sin embargo, esta afirmación no es correcta. Aún resulta posible procesar y, eventualmente, condenar a los miembros de dicho movimiento católico que sean hallados responsables de haber cometido violación sexual en agravio de menores de 14 años de edad.

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Sodalitium Christianae Vitae issues statement in wake of accusations

PERU
The Tidings

The Sodalitium Christianae Vitae issued a statement on Wednesday announcing its commitment to the investigation of mistreatement, including sexual abuse, allegedly committed by its founder.

The Oct. 21 statement was released after the publication in Peru of a book containing testimonies against Luis Fernando Figari, founder of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae.

“The testimonies refer to acts of abuse and mistreatment, including sexual abuse. It is a cause for deep grief and shame if such acts could have been committed by Luis Fernando Figari, the founder and for many years the Superior General of our community,” read the statement which bore the signature of Alessandro Moroni Llabrés, the community’s current superior general.

Moroni also stated that “we are creating an ad hoc committee, with the participation of experts from outside our community, that would be available to meet with any person who may have been affected.”

“At the same time we are committed to thoroughly investigating and clarifying the truth about the incidents, which are intolerable, because they involve grave suffering for persons who trusted our community, and they betray our deepest values.”

The Sodalitium Christianae Vitae is a society of apostolic life which was founded in 1971 in Peru, and granted pontifical recognition in 1997. Alejandro Bermúdez, executive director of CNA, is a member of the community.

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Peru probes possible sex abuse by founder of Catholic society

PERU
Reuters

LIMA | BY MITRA TAJ

Peru’s attorney general has launched an investigation to determine whether the founder and former head of an elite Catholic society sexually and physically abused children and former members of the secretive group.

The two-month inquiry into Luis Fernando Figari follows the publication of a book by an investigative journalist, in which three unidentified former members of Sodalitium Christianae Vitae accuse Figari of rape and molestation when they were boys. Others, out of 30 interviewed for the book, describe being brainwashed and physically abused.

Sodalitium said Figari lives in Rome and has denied all accusations. Figari could not be located for comment.

But the organization said the accounts in the book were plausible. “It pains and shames us that acts like that could have been committed by Luis Fernando Figari,” Sodalitium said.

“A corresponding investigation is being opened and if it is found necessary to bring him here that will be done,” Attorney General Pablo Sanchez said.

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Security ramps up for George Pell’s date with inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

October 24, 2015

John Lyons, Associate Editor

Victoria police are planning a major security operation for the appearance of George Pell at the child sexual abuse royal commission in response to concerns about protecting him from angry victims.

Cardinal Pell, the Vatican’s third most senior official, has retained one of Australia’s most expensive barristers, Allan Myers QC, for what could be a make-or-break appearance in Melbourne on December 14.

The Catholic Church will pick up Mr Myers’s bill, which could be up to $20,000 a day.

Among the security concerns, abuse survivors have suggested they will hold protests to coincide with the hearing. One has threatened a dramatic demonstration inside the hearing room in front of Cardinal Pell.

The commission begins hearings in Melbourne on November 24. The first two weeks will focus on Melbourne and the third week on Ballarat, after which Cardinal Pell will give evidence.

Hearings that had been scheduled for Ballarat have been moved to Melbourne, partly because of security concerns, police said. Many in Ballarat are angry at what they see as an insufficient response by the church to the abuse they suffered.

Cardinal Pell was not in charge of Ballarat but while he was a priest he lived for a time in the presbytery with Gerald Ridsdale. Based on number of convictions, Ridsdale is the worst pedophile in any Australian church.

After parents forced Ridsdale out of Mortlake, in the Ballarat diocese in September 1982, a committee decided to move him to another parish. Minutes show Cardinal Pell was at that meeting. It has not been established whether Ridsdale’s pedophilia was discussed.

Ridsdale, now in jail, was moved to different parishes for 26 years after first sexually abusing a child. His convictions involve 54 children aged between six and 16 between 1961 and 1987. He is believed to have raped hundreds more but most decided not to prosecute.
Cardinal Pell lived in the East Ballarat presbytery with Ridsdale in 1973, and has said he did not know Ridsdale was a pedophile.

Bishop Ronald Mulkearns was responsible for the Ballarat diocese. It is not known whether, for health reasons, he will be able to give evidence to the commission.

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Gewalt in Einrichtungen der Caritas Wien: Bisher 48 Betroffene

OSTERREICH
der Standard

GUDRUN SPRINGER
21. Oktober 2015

Die Caritas ließ Missbrauchsfälle aufarbeiten und leitete einen Präventionsprozess ein

Wien – Die Caritas Wien hat historische Fälle von Gewalt, Missbrauch und sexuellen Übergriffen in ihren Großeinrichtungen aufarbeiten lassen. Dazu beleuchtete die Sozialpädagogin und Psychoanalytikerin Tanja Kraushofer seit Herbst 2012 Vorgänge in vier Einrichtungen. Am Mittwoch wurde ihr Bericht “Erinnern hilft vorbeugen” präsentiert: 48 von Gewalt betroffene Personen haben sich demnach bisher gemeldet.

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Cari savonesi, su don Pietro Pinetto la Diocesi ha mentito. Ecco le carte. Ora il vescovo Lupi proceda col processo canonico.

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

Estratto dagli atti;“io ricordo bene la notte in cui Pinetto mi invitò nel suo letto, in seminario: lui indossava un pigiama di flanella, giacca e pantaloni a righe azzurre e bianche: anche io avevo il pigiama, ma lui strofinò il pene sulla mia coscia, io ero un bambino di 12 anni ma non ero mica scemo: ricordo benissimo quando cercò di entrare la seconda volta nel mio letto, in camera con tutti i seminaristi, subito dopo avermi spalmato la crema sulla caviglia e aver cercato di massaggiarmi le parti intime“.

Anche per noi della Rete L’ABUSO sta diventando davvero imbarazzante denunciare ancora una volta, carte alla mano, la profonda disonestà intellettuale della diocesi di Savona – Noli, del suo vescovo Vittorio Lupi e di molti dei sacerdoti che la compongono. Quello che indigna ulteriormente è il messaggio altamente diseducativo che la chiesa savonese in questi anni, attraverso i diversi casi ha dato ai giovani, un messaggio che nella sostanza insegna che qualunque malefatta si può mettere a tacere, basta screditare chi la denuncia, fare un bel comunicato stampa, chiedere scusa e si ricomincia da capo.

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Caritas berichtet über Missbrauchsfälle in Heimen

OSTERREICH
religion.orf

[Caritas reported cases of abuse in its institutions.]

Die Caritas hat ihren Bericht über Missbrauch von Kindern und Jugendlichen in ihren Großbetreuungseinrichtungen vorgelegt – bisher haben sich 48 Opfer gemeldet. Seit Herbst 2012 arbeitet die Caritas die Missbrauchsfälle auf.

Neben einer Entschuldigung für dieses „dunkle Kapitel“ in der Geschichte der Organisation, berichtete Caritas-Präsident Michael Landau am Mittwoch auch von künftigen Präventionsmaßnahmen. Durch die Aufarbeitung der Geschehnisse, Interviews mit Zeitzeugen und Berichte von Opfern, habe man „schmerzlich erkennen“ müssen, dass es auch in den Häusern der Caritas zu systematischer Gewalt sowie physischem, psychischem und sexuellem Missbrauch gekommen sei.

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Caritas-Bericht dokumentiert früheren Missbrauch in Wiener Heimen

OSTERREICH
Radio Vatikan

[In Vienna, children and young people were abused in Caritas facilities between 1950 and 1980 and this included psychological, physical and sexual violence. The abuse was documented in a 100-page report which was made public Wednesday.]

In Wiener Caritas-Einrichtungen haben Heimkinder und Jugendliche um die Jahre zwischen 1950 und 1980 psychische, physische und auch sexuelle Gewalt erfahren. Das verdeutlicht ein 100-Seiten-Bericht, der am Mittwoch in Wien präsentiert wurde. “Caritas-Einrichtungen gehören in die breite Reihe jener staatlich wie konfessionell betriebenen Fürsorgeanstalten, die in den vergangenen Jahrzehnten systematische und systemimmanente Gewalt aufwiesen,“ beschrieb Caritas-Präsident Michael Landau vor den Journalisten die Erkenntnis der Aufarbeitung, die unter Anleitung externer Experten in dreijähriger Arbeit erstellt worden ist.

“Heimkinder wurden geschlagen, misshandelt, gedemütigt und gequält, die Intims- und Privatsphäre vorenthalten”, fasste die Berichtsautorin Tanja Kraushofer die Ergebnisse zusammen. Schwere Prügeleien, sexueller Missbrauch und sexuelle Übergriffe sowohl von Seiten von Mitarbeitern wie auch unter Heimkindern seien durchaus ein geduldeter Teil des Alltags gewesen.

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No Credit Checks for Clergy?

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

10/22/2015

Jennifer Haselberger

Yesterday, priests of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis received the following clarification from Tim O’Malley, Director of Ministerial Standards. As the email explains, while credit checks are required for persons who handle parish money in excess of $250, the definition of ‘persons’ vis a vis this policy does not include priests. Per O’Malley’s email, ‘credit checks are not required for priests’.

In case you are wondering why this is a cause for concern, please review my prior post ‘The Next Big Scandal in the Church‘, or the recent article on NJ.com. Obviously, credit checks don’t eliminate the potential for theft or exploitation, but they can be a useful tool in identifying problematic behavior and, when properly reviewed and acted upon, may help to prevent exploitation and other harm to vulnerable individuals.

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Nunavut court accepts joint sentence deal on Dejaeger’s Alberta sex crimes

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

JIM BELL

Justice Susan Cooper has accepted four five-year concurrent jail sentences that lawyers submitted to her jointly this past Sept. 29 for four sex crimes that the pedophile ex-priest, Eric Dejaeger, now 69, committed against three children in Alberta nearly 40 years ago.

“It is likely that all victims of Mr. Dejaeger have now come forward,” Cooper said.

Dejeager, who earned his notoriety for molesting numerous Inuit children in Baker Lake and Igloolik, pleaded guilty to the four charges last month in Iqaluit.

That includes one count of indecent assault for his molestation of a nine-year-old Aboriginal altar boy in Grande Cache, Alta., on at least 10 occasions at home and on the land between 1974 and 1976.

Another two counts, attempted buggery and indecent assault, arise from offences he committed against an eight-year-old boy in Edmonton between 1975 and 1978.

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Negligence Lawsuit Filed Against IBLP

UNITED STATES
Recovering Grace

21 October 2015

Dear Recovering Grace Reader,

Late yesterday afternoon we received an email from a Texas-based law firm notifying us that a lawsuit had been filed against the Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP) and its current board members, John Stancil, Anthony Burrus, Gil Bates, Timothy Levendusky, Stephen Paine, and David York. The lawsuit (which we have reviewed in its entirety) was filed by five women who allege they experienced “sexual abuse, sexual harassment and inappropriate/unauthorized touching” while “participants, interns, or employees of IBLP.” Four of the plaintiffs have previously published their accounts here on Recovering Grace.

One of the law firms representing the plaintiffs is owned by David Gibbs III. You may recognize that name because his father, David Gibbs, Jr., has a long-standing relationship with Bill Gothard and the IBLP organization. In fact, it was Gibbs, Jr., who conducted the “internal investigation” paid for by the IBLP board in early 2014 (for a refresher of those events, review our response to the IBLP board statement from June 2014). Gibbs III has previously been quite outspoken against his father’s work, stating that it “helps cover for alleged and/or eventually convicted abusers, or the churches or ministries they work for.”

The lawsuit, which was filed in the Circuit Court for Dupage County (Illinois), alleges that IBLP was negligent over the past several decades by failing to properly address alleged sexual abuse and harassment by IBLP employees and that IBLP failed to properly report known or suspected abuse to the proper authorities. The lawsuit further alleges that IBLP’s conduct was “wilful and wanton” because IBLP demonstrated an “utter indifference to and/or [a] conscious disregard for a substantial risk of harm” to the plaintiffs, and that IBLP and its directors engaged in a civil conspiracy to cover up the allegations.

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BUSTED: Duggar family’s homeschool program sued for sexually abusing minors

UNITED STATES
The Raw Story

ARTURO GARCIA
22 OCT 2015

The Institute in Basic Life Principles, (IBLP) the homeschooling program used by the Duggar family, was accused of covering up sexual assault against underage girls in a lawsuit filed on Tuesday, the Washington Post reported.

The five plaintiffs, identified as Charis Barker, Rachel Frost, Rachel Lees, Gretchen Wilkinson and one Jane Doe, are each seeking $50,000 in damages, saying they were “at times minors” when they were subjected to the abuse and “inappropriate touching” during their association with the group.

While the institute is named as a defendant in the suit, founder and former director Bill Gothard, who was placed on “indefinite administrative leave” last year after being accused of sexually harassing and abusing employees, was not. Despite being cleared in an internal investigation by the group — which the lawsuit described as a “sham” — Gothard is not allowed to hold any sort of counseling or leadership role within the institute.

Despite not being named in the suit, Gothard is accused of abusive actions against the victims, who were as young as 13 or 14 years old when they took place. The womens’ attorney, David Gibbs III, said Gothard would offer counseling to them at the IBLP’s home office in Oak Brook, Illinois. He would them touch the victims inappropriately when they were alone, or in the back seat of the car if Gothard used a driver.

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Five women sue Bill Gothard’s ministry that has ties to the Duggars

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Sarah Posner October 22

Five women have sued the Institute in Basic Life Principles, once a leader in the Christian homeschooling movement, charging that the organization and its board of directors enabled and covered up sexual abuse and harassment of interns, employees, and other participants in its programs.

Each of the plaintiffs — Gretchen Wilkinson, Charis Barker, Rachel Frost, Rachel Lees and a Jane Doe — seeks $50,000 in damages, alleging that the organization and its board acted negligently, with willful and wanton disregard for them, and engaged in a civil conspiracy to conceal the wrongdoing.

The lawsuit is the latest chapter in a long-simmering scandal that has engulfed the ministry once admired by conservative Christian parents for teaching them how to raise obedient, devout and chaste children since the 1960s. The ministry has found dedicated followers in politics, including Rep. Daniel Webster (R-Fla.), who sought to replace Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) as House Speaker, and in entertainment.

Bill Gothard, founder of IBLP. (photo via RNS) Bill Gothard, founder of IBLP. (photo via RNS)
Last year, IBLP’s founder and longtime president, Bill Gothard, resigned amid allegations by more than 30 women that he had sexually harassed them. Former followers have said that Gothard was revered as an almost saint-like figure, and that members of IBLP’s homeschooling arm, the Advanced Training Institute, feared questioning him.

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Victim’s Attorneys John Manly And Vince Finaldi Slam Los Angeles Archdiocese For Petitioning Supreme Court To Reduce Protections For Child Victims Of Sexual Abuse

CALIFORNIA
Sys-Con

BY PR NEWSWIRE

OCTOBER 22, 2015

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif., Oct. 22, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Attorneys representing child abuse victims of the Roman Catholic Church and the Los Angeles Unified School District reacted with outrage to an attempt by Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez to reduce the protections given to minor victims of sexual predators in California.

According to a breaking report by Norma Ribeiro on Univision, the Archbishop’s attorneys filed a petition on October 19th with the California Supreme Court asking them to “de-publish” the recent California Court of Appeals of decision in Sinai M. v. Los Angeles Unified School District, Case No. B253983, 2015 CalApp. LEXIS 814.

This highly publicized case condemned and overturned a trial court decision that allowed LAUSD to escape liability by blaming a thirteen-year-old girl for having sex with her 28-year-old math teacher. The LAUSD attorneys introduced the girl’s sexual history into the trial as part of their “blame the victim strategy.” They portrayed the thirteen-year-old victim as a willing partner in her own abuse.

The Court of Appeals stated, “The district’s position is as outrageous as it is wrong.”

Attorney John Manly, a leading advocate for child sex abuse victims, reacted angrily to the Archbishop’s petition, “I find it disturbing that the Los Angeles Archdiocese objects to the higher standard of protection for child sex abuse victims established by the court of appeals in the Sinai case. By seeking to de-publish this important decision, the Archbishop will make children throughout California more vulnerable to sexual abuse by priests, teachers, scoutmasters and other adults who are in a position to prey upon them.”

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Survivor of alleged elite paedophile ring including former prime minister speaks out

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

A WOMAN claiming to be the victim of a “VIP paedophile ring”, which involved three former prime ministers, has alleged she was prostituted to “paedophile parties” at Parliament House in Canberra.

Speaking to media in Sydney, Fiona Barnett detailed her alleged abuse by the alleged elite paedophile ring 40 years ago.

The 45-year-old said she was abused by the ring, which included high-ranking politicians, police and members of the judiciary, at the age of five and claimed there were thousands of other victims.

“My experiences were horrific beyond words,” she said. “But the way I’ve been treated for reporting the crimes I witnessed and experienced has been far worse than my original abuse experiences.”

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Political elite were part of paedophile ring, alleged victim Fiona Barnett claims

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

October 23, 2015

Rachel Browne
Social Affairs Reporter

A woman who alleges she was a child victim of the paedophile ring named by Liberal senator Bill Heffernan said she had repeatedly reported the abuse to authorities but no action had been taken.

Speaking outside the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Fiona Barnett called on the authorities to investigate the alleged ring, which she believes is still operating.

Ms Barnett alleged the ring involved hundreds of perpetrators, including a political elte, such as a former governor-general and a former education minister, but she did not name them.

“Throughout my childhood I was a victim of Australia’s VIP child sex trafficking ring,” she said.

“The people involved in this elite paedophile ring included high-ranking politicians, police and judiciary.”

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Victim of alleged paedophile ring claims she was abused at parties attended by political elite

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AAP/ The Daily Telegraph

THE victim of an alleged child sex trafficking network claims she was prostituted at dozens of paedophile parties, which were attended by political elite at Canberra’s Parliament House.

Speaking to the media outside the Royal Commission in Sydney today, Fiona Barnett, from northern NSW, also claims she witnessed “hundreds of crimes” — including murder, rape, abduction and torture — at the hands of the so-called elite paedophile ring 40 years ago.

The network, which Ms Barnett maintains still operates today, included high-ranking politicians, and police and judiciary members.

Ms Barnett, 45, said she had reported the allegations to multiple health professionals, NSW Police in 2008 and the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in 2013.

“My experiences were horrific beyond words … but the way I’ve been treated for reporting the crimes I witnessed and experienced has been far worse than my original abuse experiences,” she said.

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The problem of porn – are bishops talking about it?

VATICAN CITY
Catholic World Report

Vatican City, Oct 23, 2015 / 04:06 am (CNA).- It hasn’t gotten a lot of media coverage so far, but the rampant affects of pornography on families worldwide has sparked concern and dialogue among the synod’s bishops – particularly the Americans.

“Porn demeans the best in the male spirit. It addicts them to a kind of cheap junk food, when real women with minds and hearts, beliefs and hopes, are much more interesting,” Archbishop Charles Chaput of Philadelphia told CNA Oct. 19.

“Happiness is built on reality, with all of its warts and joys – not on illusions. Pornography is nothing but illusions.”

The Vatican’s synod on the family was opened by Pope Francis on Oct. 4, and it will run until Oct. 25. This year’s event follows the theme “The vocation and mission of the family in the Church and the modern world,” and follows 2014’s extraordinary synod on the family, which focused on pastoral challenges regarding family life.

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‘It hurt, everywhere’: Teen talks about deadly beating at reclusive N.Y. church

NEW YORK
Washington Post

By Lindsey Bever October 22

After a Sunday service at Word of Life Christian Church near New Hartford, N.Y., two teenage brothers were told to wait around. The younger teen said the pastor called a “counseling session” to “talk about what we had done.”

Police said parishioners — including the teens’ parents and sister — purportedly wanted them to “confess to prior sins and ask for forgiveness.” When the teens wouldn’t talk, the teen said, the night turned violent.

Nineteen-year-old Lucas Leonard and his younger brother, Christopher, 17, were punched, kicked and whipped with a 4-foot, folded electrical cord during the hours-long beating that began Oct. 11 and continued to the 12th, Christopher Leonard said Wednesday during a court hearing.

Lucas Leonard was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital.

Christopher Leonard was hospitalized with serious injures.

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Ex-D.C. officer pleads guilty to sexually abusing two teenage girls

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

A former D.C. police officer pleaded guilty Thursday to sexually abusing two teenage girls who attended the Southeast Washington church where he served as pastor, prosecutors said.

Darrell Best, 46, a 25-year D.C. police department veteran, admitted to one count of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor and one count of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor. Best also pleaded guilty to a child pornography charge.

If approved by U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton, the plea agreement calls for Best to be sentenced to 18 years in prison, with a hearing date set for Feb. 26, according to the U.S. attorney’s office for the District.

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Ex-DC police officer tears up during guilty plea for sex crimes

WASHINGTON (DC)
WUSA

[with video]

WASHINGTON (WUSA9) — A former D.C. police officer and pastor teared up in court Thursday while pleading guilty to multiple sex crimes.

Darrell Best, 46, is expected to spend the next 18 years in jail after pleading guilty to one count of producing child pornography, one count of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor and one count of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor.

The charges stem from incidents involving two female minors who knew him through the Southeast D.C. church where he served as head pastor. Prosecutors say one incident happened on December 3, 2014, at Metropolitan Police Department headquarters and another happened inside the church on February 14, 2015.

In both cases, Best was wearing his MPD uniform.

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Child abuse royal commission: Geelong Grammar to rethink its handling of child abuse cases

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Margaret Paul

Geelong Grammar is looking to change the way it deals with victims of sexual abuse at the school, the commercial manager of the school has told the child abuse royal commission.

Andrew Moore gave evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse about the way the school dealt with victims of sexual abuse over several decades.

He was quizzed about the case of a former student, known only as BIW, who was abused by boarding house master Philippe Trutmann in 1989.

Trutmann was at the school’s Highton campus in the 1980s and 90s, and was eventually convicted of sexually assaulting 41 students during that time.

Counsel assisting the inquiry David Lloyd asked why the school refused to acknowledge key facts in BIW’s case even after Trutmann had pleaded guilty.

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Another Kind of Abuse

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Daniel A. Olivas

The email came early one Tuesday morning two years ago, the kind of email that makes a writer’s heart beat with excitement and just a bit of fear.

It began: “I’m an editor at the Times opinion section, and we’re looking for someone in LA to write an essay for us about the sex abuse scandal in the church there….” The email address included the editor’s name followed by @nytimes.com. Yep. That Times.

I wondered why the editor had contacted me. True, I am an LA-based, Chicano writer. At the time, I had six books under my belt and I sometimes touched on the Church abuse scandal in my fiction. So, after some thought, I figured a simple Google search could have brought The New York Times editor to my inbox.

But I tried to stay cool and wrote this simple response to the editor: “Thanks for the email. I would be interested. Please send the guidelines.”

She quickly wrote back and offered an explanation of her own: “So we often ask novelists or literary writers to write essays off of a news event. The idea is to get some good, evocative writing into the paper (often with some personal anecdotes or stories), but also to offer some interesting argument or insight about the news. We were thinking you might have something interesting to say about abuse, Catholicism and Latinos in LA, but the angle would be totally up to you (and of course it would depend on whether you grew up in the church/feel like you can offer a personal perspective).”

Made sense to me. So, I hunkered down and wrote it. After some back-and-forth with the editor, it ran online on a Thursday evening and in the print edition that Sunday under the title, “The Priest That Preyed.”

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Catholic school principal sues over departure

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

by Lisa Wangsness GLOBE STAFF OCTOBER 23, 2015

It started with a janitor at a Catholic school in Revere using a bathroom urinal with students present.

After a parent complained, the episode led to a community crisis: A second-grade teacher, the school principal, and the pastor of Immaculate Conception parish resigned. The police and Suffolk prosecutors swiftly cleared the janitor of criminal wrongdoing. Nearly 1,000 parents and parishioners signed a petition asking for a meeting with Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston.

Now, the former principal, Alison Kelly, is suing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston for more than $1 million. She claims the church forced her to resign in January even though she had immediately reported the parent’s complaints to the pastor in charge of the school.

The ousting of Kelly, who was principal for about three years, and her colleagues “was a cold, calculated attempt by the church to do some face-saving at the expense of innocent people,” said Kelly’s attorney, Gerard F. Malone, in an interview.

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Drafting committee cardinal: Synod will not provide Communion path for remarried

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Oct. 23, 2015

ROME
One of the prelates responsible for drafting the final document from the ongoing Synod of Bishops has said he does not anticipate that it will propose changes in the Catholic church’s practices towards the divorced and remarried.

Indian Cardinal Oswald Gracias — one of ten prelates who co-drafted the document after three-weeks of intense deliberations among some 270 bishops at the Oct. 4-25 Synod — said in particular that one specific proposal that might have allowed the remarried to take Communion would likely not be mentioned.

That proposal would have suggested that the church could use what is called the “internal forum” to allow some remarried persons to take the Eucharist on a private, case-by-case basis after seeking guidance, advice, and then permission from priests or bishops. …

Gracias gave three examples of work bishops’ conferences could be entrusted to do, saying they could perhaps handle marriage tribunals, clergy sexual abuse cases currently referred to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and even help in the selection of bishops.

Regarding sexual abuse cases, the cardinal said: “I think [bishops’ conferences] should take more responsibility because that’s far too heavy to have one office in Rome handling all the cases in the world. It’s practically, logistically, impossible.”

“Bishops’ conferences could also, I think, in the future — I’m not saying they would decide — assist more, have a greater role in the choice of bishops,” said Gracias, who is also a member of the Council of Cardinals advising the pope on reforming the Vatican. “That’s a very crucial decision for every church and bishops’ conference.”

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October 22, 2015

Court hears Catholic teen molested by priest at Wollongong school

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Nick McLaren

The victim in an alleged Wollongong historic child abuse case has repeatedly rejected claims in court he made up the allegations.

The alleged abuse involved former priest Father Patrick Kervin at Holy Spirit College in Bellambi.

The student was aged 15 when the alleged abuse occurred in the 1980s.

Now aged in his 40’s, the student who cannot be named, told the court Kervin called him to his office to console him as his mother was ill.

He described how Kervin put his hand on his knee then slid his hand up his leg, touching his genitals as he leaned in to kiss him.

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GUERIN COLLEGE PREP ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL ARRESTED FOR ALLEGED SEXUAL ABUSE, SCHOOL OFFICIALS SAY

ILLINOIS
ABC 7

[with video]

RIVER GROVE, Ill. (WLS) — An administrator at a west suburban Catholic high school was arrested Wednesday for allegedly sexually abusing a student, school officials confirmed.

The individual, who is an assistant principal and music director, has not yet been charged. The 34-year-old male staffer had been at the school for six years.

The administrator at Guerin College Preparatory High School in River Grove was put on administrative leave after school officials learned of the accusations last month, said Steve Baldwin, Guerin president.

The school then emailed the parents of the 400 students enrolled at the school, Baldwin said. The email read, in part: “We are taking this situation very seriously. As soon as we were made aware of these allegations … was placed on administrative leave. We are cooperating with the authorities, including DCFS and the Chicago Police Department.”

Officials said the alleged abuse did not occur at the school and there is no indication that more than one student was involved. A parent told ABC7 that the student involved was a 17-year-old boy and that another student witnessed the incident.

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Suburban principal accused of sexual abuse

ILLINOIS
WGN

[with video]

BY TAHMAN BRADLEY, UPDATED AT 06:16PM, OCTOBER 22, 2015

RIVER GROVE, Ill. — Charges are pending against an assistant principal of a River Grove high school for allegedly sexually abusing a male student.

The president of the school says the victim is a student.

Yesterday, the Guerin College Prep sent home to parents a letter explaining the situation. The letter identifies the assistant principal by name. But because charges are pending on the 34-year-old, WGN is not naming the suspect.

Guerin College Prep says the assistant principal has been leave since the allegations first surfaced Sept. 10.

The alleged incident occurred outside of school in the 2600 block of North Sayre Avenue in Chicago.

Police say the victim is a 17-year-old male.

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Catholic high school official arrested on child sex abuse allegations

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

David Pollard
Pioneer Press

A Guerin Prep High School administrator has been arrested for allegations of inappropriate sexual contact with a student off campus.

The 34-year-old assistant principal at the River Grove high school was arrested Wednesday by members of the Chicago Police Department’s Special Investigations Unit on accusations of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, according to a Chicago Police Department spokeswoman.

Charges had not been filed as of Thursday afternoon, the spokeswoman said.

The man allegedly had inappropriate contact with a 17-year-old Guerin Prep student on Sept. 20 in the 2600 block of North Sayre Avenue in Chicago’s Galewood neighborhood, according to police.

While working at Guerin, the assistant principal was also the musical director at St. William Catholic Church, located at 2600 N. Sayre Ave., the block where the alleged incident took place.

The Archdiocese of Chicago acknowledged the arrest in an emailed statement.

“The Archdiocese of Chicago is aware of the situation and can confirm that the situation was properly reported to [the Department of Children and Family Services],” the statement said. “We are monitoring the situation and will continue to cooperate with the civil authorities.”

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Prestigious school in spotlight at royal commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

TIM PALMER: The former head of one of Australia’s most elite schools has spent hours in the witness box at the royal commission into child sex abuse.

Robert Bugg was campus headmaster of Geelong Grammar, investigated for its response to several abuse allegations.

Previous witnesses gave evidence that Mr Bugg contributed to expelling a student who make allegations of abuse.

Today Mr Bugg denied that, saying if he’d been told at the time he would have acted.

Tom Nightingale reports.

TOM NIGHTINGALE: Robert Bugg was the master of Geelong Grammar’s Highton campus at a time when one staff member was committing devastating abuse.

Boarding house staffer Philippe Trutmann admitted to abusing 40 students over a decade ending in 1995.

Robert Bugg was questioned extensively about Trutmann today, and consistently denied knowing anything was wrong.

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Former Arctic priest Eric Dejaeger to appeal in child-sex case

CANADA
Global News

IQALUIT, Nunavut – A defrocked Arctic priest in prison for dozens of sex offences against Inuit children is appealing.

The news came out in a Nunavut court in Iqaluit on Thursday as Eric Dejaeger was sentenced for more child sex assaults in Alberta.

The former Oblate was given five-year sentences for acts committed against three children between the ages of six and nine in Edmonton and Grande Cache in the 1970s.

One of the victims, then a nine-year-old altar boy, was assaulted over four years. The other two were a brother and sister, eight and six, who were assaulted over a three-year period.

In victim impact statements, the brother told court he has become aggressive and has trouble controlling his impulses. His sister said she has suffered from substance abuse and depression.

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DRS. CARL & DR. GERTY CORI

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

LAST YEAR, HE WAS RIDICULED FROM COAST-TO-COAST FOR repeatedly saying he “couldn’t recall” when he learned that child sexual abuse was a crime. Now, he’s running for a leadership post in the U.S. Conference of Catholic bishops. Our town’s Archbishop Robert Carlson is campaigning for the chairmanship of the USCCB’s Catholic Education Committee. Carlson was deposed in the case against Fr. Joseph Ross, who worked in Richmond Heights, Woodson Terrace, Pacific, U. City and elsewhere. The election is next month in Baltimore. Carlson’s opponent is the bishop of Youngstown, Ohio, says noted Catholic blogger Rocco Palmo. …

PRIESTS’ PENSIONS

October 21, 2015

Some funding levels for pensions of priests have fallen below 65 percent. The St. Louis Archdiocese now requires parishes to contribute to the retirement of their priests. Archdiocese CFO Robert Bouche tells Reuters: “Aggressive steps have been taken in recent years to increase funding levels.”

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The Gotham Awards Just Confirmed Spotlight as the Oscar Front-Runner

UNITED STATES
Vanity Fair

BY RICHARD LAWSON

Sure, it’s only October, but that’s no reason why we can’t get the awards season rolling with the first awards nominations of the year. The Gotham Awards, which highlight the best independent films of the year (along with the actors, writers, and directors who made them happen), announced its 2015 nominations this morning, so let’s see if we can glean anything about the Oscar season from these first, very early tea leaves.

The big takeaway is probably that the Gothams took special care to invent an award for the ensemble cast of Spotlight, Tom McCarthy’s journalism procedural, which took the Toronto Film Festival by storm in September. Could this be an early indicator that Spotlight is, as we’ve intimated on these pages, the current front-runner for a best-picture Academy Award? I think so! Of course, there are still some unseen movies lurking on the horizon—Joy, The Hateful Eight, The Revenant—that could spoil it for Spotlight, but right now it’s the film to beat.

Elsewhere, Carol had a strong showing, nominated for best feature, best screenplay, and best actress. Cate Blanchett was the performer singled out here, which might further dilute her co-star Rooney Mara’s awards chances, even though Mara won the best actress prize at Cannes. Though, she’ll likely be run in supporting for the big dance, so this snub might not actually mean anything bad for her. Either way, the nominations are a good, important bump for the film, which has been received rapturously by critics at festivals, but has to sustain that buzz until it’s released next month, and beyond.

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Prepararán exhorto para interrogar al papa Francisco en el marco del Caso Karadima

CHILE
Publimetro

[A move in underway in Chile to have Pope Francis questioned as part of the civil law suit against priest Fernando Karadima. The request document after being drafted will be sent to the Supreme Court which will in turn forward it to the Chilean Foreign Ministry and ultimately will be sent to the Vatican. This action comes after publication of a video recorded by an Argentine citizen at the Vatican where the pope told Chilean Catholics that people in Osorno were stupid and led by “lefties” in their opposition to appointment of Bishop Juan Barros to the Osorno diocese.]

El documento, tras ser redactado, deberá ser enviado a la Corte Suprema, quien a su vez lo remitirá al ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores para comenzar su viaje a El Vaticano.

El ministro de fuero Juan Manuel Muñoz, que lleva adelante la demanda civil interpuesta por tres víctimas del sacerdote Fernando Karadima contra la Iglesia Católica chilena, dio luz verde para preparar un exhorto con la finalidad que sea respondido por el papa Francisco.

La acción se da tras la publicación de un video grabado por un ciudadano argentino en El Vaticano, donde el sumo pontífice relató a fieles chilenos que la gente de Osorno era “tonta” por creer acusaciones de “zurdos”, las cuales entregarían algún grado de responsabilidad al obispo de esa ciudad -Juan Barros- para encubrir las acciones del ex párroco de la iglesia El Bosque.

Los denunciantes de Karadina, James Hamilton, Juan Carlos Cruz y José Andrés Murillo, buscan obtener una indemnización superior a los 400 millones de pesos ya que, según su versión, la jerarquía de la iglesia criolla omitió y tuvo una actitud negligente al momento de conocer estas acusaciones.

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Trevor Bolton – the ‘kindly father figure’ who preyed on boys at Carmel College

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

By Simon Rocker, October 22, 2015

For some of the boarders at the exclusive Carmel College, a Saturday night treat was in store. A select group of half a dozen or so young boys would be invited up to watch Match of the Day in the flat of one of their teachers Trevor Bolton, who would give them fizzy drinks and crisps.

Bolton had arrived when he was 31 at the Jewish school, secluded in a pleasant rural campus outside Oxford, to teach French in 1968. He became master of the junior boarding house, looking after boys from 10 to 13 or 14.

When some of the boys became homesick or bullied, he would offer them comfort and a reassuring hug.

One former pupil recalled being “taken under his wing” when he was unhappy; the boy felt out of place at an institution where other pupils arrived in a chauffeur-driven Rolls while he came from modest circumstances.

Another pupil who also found life as boarder difficult said the teacher wanted to be a “second father”.

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Jury finds ex-Carmel College teacher guilty of remaining sex abuse charges

UNITED KINGDOM
The JC

By Josh Jackman, October 22, 2015

Former Carmel College Trevor Bolton has been found guilty of all 25 counts of sexual assaulting students at a Jewish boarding school.

The jury at Oxford Crown Court returned a majority guilty verdict on four remaining counts on Thursday, having already convicted Bolton on 21 counts of abusing boys aged 11 to 15 at the Oxfordshire school College over a 20-year period.

The abuse, committed between 1968 and 1988, included 16 counts of indecent assault on a male person, six counts of indecency with a child and three other serious sexual offences.

Bolton was remanded in custody, with sentencing expected on Friday.

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Co-founder of kids camp in Bushey charged with conspiracy to cause cruelty to children

UNITED KINGDOM
Borehamwood & Elstree Times

Jyoti Rambhai, Reporter / Friday 4 September 2015

THE co-founder of an American-style children’s camp in Bushey has been arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to cause cruelty to children.

Tal Landsman was one of the directors of LL Camps, based at St Margaret’s School in Merry Hill Road. He has been charged with conspiracy to cause cruelty to a child and conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.

The 25-year-old, of Admiral Drive, Stevenage, was arrested on Thursday, August 27, along with two others in an operation led by detectives at Hertfordshire Constabulary’s specialist joint child protection investigation unit.

Larry Lewis, 55, of Lullington Garth, Borehamwood, has been charged with conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.

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Founder of children’s camp in Bushey faces further charges of taking indecent photographs

UNITED KINGDOM
Borehamwood & Elstree Times

Jyoti Rambhai, Reporter Thursday 22 October 2015

The director of an American-style children’s camp in Bushey faces further charges relating to taking indecent photographs of a child.

Ben Lewis, of Lullington Garth, Borehamwood, who ran LL Camps, has been charged with two counts of taking an indecent photograph of a child in Hertfordshire on or before May 6, 2015.

He has also been charged with making indecent photographs of a child in Hertfordshire on or before May 6, 2015 and attempting to observe another person doing a private act without consent for sexual gratification in Hertfordshire, on or between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2012.

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Victims of institutional abuse ‘should be compensated’

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

Victims of institutional abuse in Northern Ireland should be compensated now, say campaigners.
It is three years since the Historical Institutional Abuse inquiry was set up to consider allegations dating back to 1922.

Such is the scale of its task, however, that its final report is not expected until next year at the earliest.

With the inquiry examining cases stretching back over decades, many of those affected are now elderly.

Some abuse victims have died without receiving any compensation or form of recognition.

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Eric Dejaeger, ex-priest, sentenced to 5 years for Edmonton sex charges

CANADA
CBC News

Former Catholic priest Eric Dejaeger was sentenced in Iqaluit today to five years in prison for sex offences stemming from the mid-1970s when he was studying in Edmonton.

Dejaeger had pleaded guilty in September to two counts of gross indecency, one count of indecent assault on a female, and one count of indecent assault on a male. The crimes were committed when the former priest was studying at the Newman Theological College in Edmonton.

He had previously applied to have the charges heard in a Nunavut courtroom rather than in Alberta.

In February, Dejaeger was sentenced to 19 years in prison for sexually abusing children in Igloolik, Nunavut, more than 30 years ago. He was convicted of 32 sex crimes ranging from indecent assault to bestiality, dating back to his time as a priest in the community.

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Pope creates new Vatican department for laity, family and life

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (UK)

Pope Francis has announced the creation of a new Vatican department for laity, family and life.

He made the announcement at this evening’s session of the family synod in Rome.

The new dicastery was proposed by the Council of Cardinals, the Pope’s closest cardinal-advisers.

It is currently unclear if the new department will be called a council or a congregation. It is also not know who will lead it.

The statutes of the new body are expected to be released in December.

According to a Vatican statement, the Holy Father told the synod fathers: “I have decided to establish a new dicastery with competency for laity, family and life, that will replace the Pontifical Council for the Laity and the Pontifical Council for the Family. The Pontifical Academy for Life will be joined to the new dicastery.

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Peru: New Cases of Child Abuse by Catholics Documented

PERU
Telesur TV

The head of the wealthy and powerful Catholic organization called Solidatium is involved in cases of child rape and other physical and sexual abuses.

Journalist and author Pedro Salinas gave a press conference in Lima, the Peruvian capital, to speak of the impact his recent publication is having.

The book is titled “Half Monks, Half Soldiers” and in it Salinas documents the abuses by the Catholic cult called Sodalitium Christianae Vitae.

The publication has stirred up the organization and many sectors of the Peruvian society. Among a series of violations, the book shows five cases of child sexual abuse by leaders of the organization, including repeated rapes by the founder Luis Fernando Figari, who founded Sodalitium in Lima in 1971, and it acquired its canonical recognition from Pope John Paul II in 1977.

According to their website, Sodalitium is a “society of Apostolic Life made up of laymen and priests who live in community as brothers, and have fully given their lives to God, proclaiming the Gospel in the diverse circumstances of human life” and make commitments of “obedience and celibacy.” It operates in seven Latin American countries, the United States and Italy.

This content was originally published by teleSUR at the following address:
“http://www.telesurtv.net/english/news/Peru-New-Cases-of-Child-Abuse-by-Catholics-Documented-20151021-0044.html”. If you intend to use it, please cite the source and provide a link to the original article. www.teleSURtv.net/english

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Journalismus im Sterben

OSTERRICH
Wiener Zeitung

Von Matthias Greuling

Vor rund zehn Jahren, da war die Welt der schreibenden Zunft noch in Ordnung. Da leistete sich ein Blatt wie der renommierte “Boston Globe” eigene Recherche-Teams, die oft monatelang hinter einem Skandal herrecherchierten, ohne auch nur ein einziges Wort darüber zu publizieren. Wenn am Ende dann die Bombe platzte, wurde schnell klar, wieso man solche Medien als “renommiert” bezeichnete: Weil sie die Kernaufgaben einer freien Presse nicht nur wahrnahmen, sondern regelrecht zelebrierten. Im Zeitalter der Blogger-Invasion und oberflächlichen Ja-Sager-Journaille sind solch edle Tugenden rar, weil unwirtschaftlich geworden.

Das befand auch Regisseur Tom McCarthy, der für “Spotlight” anhand eines handfesten Skandals die Tugenden des aufrechten Journalismus durchdekliniert. Es geht um den sexuellen Missbrauch von Kindern durch katholische Geistliche, den der “Globe” 2001 aufdeckte und der den Bostoner Kardinal Bernard Francis Law schließlich den Job kostete. Das spannend inszenierte Drama mit Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams und Mark Ruffalo zeigt die beschwerliche Handarbeit, die Aufdeckerjournalisten leisten müssen, um hinter die Fassaden zu blicken.

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Which is the real narrative for the riveting theatre of the synod?

ROME
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor October 22, 2015

ROME — A Synod of Bishops at the Vatican is always a sprawling, multi-headed creature, and that’s certainly been true of the 2015 edition devoted to issues facing the family.

There have been hundreds of speeches, three sets of reports from 13 small working groups, daily press briefings, more media interviews than anyone can possibly track, not to mention a daily avalanche of commentary from a staggering variety of voices.

On Saturday, the synod is expected to adopt a final document. It likely will be a long, complex text, and on some contested points, its language may be intentionally vague in order to attract consensus.

Given all that, in some ways it’s misleading to talk about “the” Synod of Bishops, singular. In terms of perceptions, there are actually several different synods, plural, depending on who’s trying to describe it and what agenda they bring.

As the end nears, three competing narratives seem to be floating around both inside and outside the synod hall. In shorthand fashion, they are:

* The “Everything’s Fine” narrative: This view holds that impressions of clash and rivalries have been exaggerated, that differences in the synod haven’t meant division, and that the bishops are united on a wide range of matters.

* The “Rigged Synod” narrative: This storyline holds that from the beginning, the people in charge of the synod have been pushing a progressive line, and that conservatives have had to fight back to try to level the playing field.

* The “Don’t Like the Pope” narrative: This way of framing the situation posits that concerns about the synod process are artificial, that the event is actually remarkably free and open, so such complaints are really a proxy for opposition to Pope Francis.

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Apuron deserves praise for seminaries

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Mari Flor L. Herrero October 22, 2015

This Aug. 16 , his excellency Archbishop Anthony Sablan Apuron celebrated the 43th anniversary of his ordination as a capuchin priest.

He was installed as the metropolitan archbishop of the Archdiocese of Agana on May 11, 1986. That is, he has been the spiritual shepherd of the Catholic Church in Guam for the last 29 years — no small feat!

It is obviously clear that when one is at the top of any organization, he/she is also the center of public scrutiny. No matter what you do, it will be scrutinized, and rightly so. There will always be someone who will find faults and shortcomings in every decision and circumstance. However, it will be the results of the decisions taken and the overall effect on the present and future of our Catholic Church in Guam that will eventually render a clear and fair judgment of our archbishop.

As for me, anyone in his right senses should acclaim and applaud Archbishop Apuron for his vision and foresight; actually he should be held in high esteem.

I still remember very vividly when I first came to Guam in the late ’70s and there were four Augustinian priests from Spain in various parishes of Guam. That made it very easy for me to attend Mass because I felt at home; I could understand what the priests were saying. That is not to say that everyone did, though; the language barrier was always there, but with a little bit of good will and lots of faith, all barriers can be conquered.

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Pope Francis is victim of internal conspiracy to ‘manipulate’ him, Vatican alleges

ROME
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 22 Oct 2015

The Vatican alleged on Thursday that Pope Francis was the victim of an internal plot to undermine his authority after a false story was leaked to the Italian press claiming that he was suffering from a brain tumour.

The front-page story was published by Quotidiano Nazionale, an Italian daily, on Wednesday, but was indignantly denied by Vatican spokesmen.

It took to new heights the atmosphere of skulduggery and Machiavellian intrigue that swirls around the Holy See at the best of times.

Cardinals and others within the Catholic Church hierarchy suggested that the unfounded story about the tumour was an attempt by “enemies” of the 78-year-old Pope to discredit him and to suggest that his judgment was impaired.

They said the timing of the leak was deeply suspicious – it came just days before the conclusion of the Synod, a three-week meeting of 270 bishops and cardinals at the Vatican which has been discussing delicate issues such as divorce and the Church’s attitude towards homosexuality.

The bishops are due to present their final report to the pontiff on Saturday.

In a forthright notice, L’Osservatore Romano, the Vatican’s own newspaper, called the story about the tumour “false” and “unfounded”.

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Ex-youth pastor charged with sexual assault on girl

PENNSYLVANIA
Butler Eagle

EAST BRADY, Clarion County — A former youth pastor at an East Brady church is accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl in his charge.

New Bethlehem police on Monday arrested David T. Pesci, 24, of East Brady, alleging he kissed and fondled the teen, a member of his youth group at the East Brady First Baptist Church, on three occasions beginning last year.

District Judge Jeffrey Miller arraigned Pesci on three felony counts each of sexual assault by a volunteer or employee of a nonprofit organization and corruption of minors. He remains free on $10,000 bail.

In an e-mail statement this morning, the church said that Pesci resigned as youth pastor July 5.

At a church sleepover in early 2014, the teen recounted, Pesci kissed her in his home, which is the church parsonage.

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Youth pastor accused of sexually assaulting 15-year-old girl

PENNSYLVANIA
WPXI

EAST BRADY, Pa. — A former youth pastor is accused of sexually assaulting a teenage girl who was a member of a church youth group.

David Pesci, 24, was the youth pastor at East Brady Baptist Church until he resigned in July.

Police told Channel 11’s Jennifer Tomazic the allegations came to light when they received an anonymous tip about inappropriate activity during youth group sleepovers at the pastor’s home.

The alleged victim, who is now 16 years old, told investigators the relationship began last November when she went to Pesci for advice. She was 15-years-old at the time.

According to the criminal complaint, the girl told police, “She was in the basement and went to a separate couch to go to sleep and Pesci then came over to her and kissed her.”

The paperwork goes on to say, “The kissing continued…she could recall Pesci kissing her on two separate occasions in the church, near the pulpit.”

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Youth Pastor Charged, Accused Of Having Sexual Relationship With 16-Year-Old

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburgh

October 22, 2015 By Lisa Washington

EAST BRADY (KDKA)- A local youth pastor has been arrested for allegedly having a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old girl.

East Brady First Baptist Church youth pastor David Pesci has been charged with sexual assault and corruption of minors.

New Bethlehem Police say the relationship started when the girl began attending a youth group at the church when she was in ninth grade. She said that Pesci, 24, was her youth pastor.

According to the complaint, the teen went on to say that the two of them began texting and messaging on Facebook less than a year ago. She said she had a fight with her best friend and was looking for advice from Pesci.

Over the months, the 16-year-old said she became very close with him and would regularly spend the night at Pesci’s home, the church parsonage along with other youth group members and Pesci’s wife.

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Bishop Luffa urged to rename house after George Bell revelation

UNITED KINGDOM
Chichester Observer

BISHOP LUFFA school will be urged to change the name of one of its houses by a charity supporting victims of rape and sexual abuse.

Maggie Ellis, director of Chichester-based charity Lifecentre said she would ask the school to change the name of ‘Bell’ house and would also be asking Chichester Cathedral to rename George Bell House, a former archdeaconry now used as a venue for away-days, meetings, quiet days, residential weekends, and conferences for up to 40 people.

The Diocese of Chichester has today apologised to a victim of the former Bishop of Chichester George Bell, who was abused as a child in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

“As a charity supporting survivors of rape and sexual abuse, we shall be writing to Bishop Luffa school to urge them to no longer name one of their ‘houses’ after Bishop Bell,” said Mrs Ellis.

“It is now clearly entirely wrong to have such a bishop held up as a person to be honoured by the school and as a figure head for children.

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Italian conspiracies surround Pope’s tumour

ITALY
The Local

After a choppy few weeks for Pope Francis, a strongly denied report that he has a brain tumour has sent Vatican and Italian conspiracy theorists into overdrive.

“The timing chosen reveals the manipulative intention of throwing up a cloud of dust,” the Vatican’s Osservatore Romano claimed in its first edition after another newspaper, Quotidiano Nazionale, published its “scoop” about the pontiff’s health.

Italian media on Thursday largely concurred with the Vatican’s description of the story as baseless and commentators were quick to air their suspicions of a plot to undermine Francis’s authority in the run-up to this weekend’s conclusion of a synod on family that has divided the Church along progressive/conservative lines.

Massimo Franco, an editorialist for Corriere della Sera, said the episode should be seen in the context of a number of embarrassing, controversial or scandalous incidents Francis and his staff have had to react to recently.

Rather than a conspiracy orchestrated by one person or group, the sequence of events realed “a more heterogenous and diffuse malaise,” Franco wrote.

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German synod group criticises ‘harsh and merciless’ attitudes to divorced and homosexuals

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (UK)

The group provided detailed suggestions for divorced and civilly remarried Catholics who want to receive the sacraments

When presenting its third synod report, the German-language group has said its members felt called to admit that “in an ill-conceived attempt to respect the doctrine of the Church, repeatedly we have had harsh and merciless pastoral attitudes that created suffering, especially for unwed mothers and child born out of wedlock,” cohabiting couples, homosexual persons and those who are divorced and civilly remarried.

“As bishops in our Church, we ask forgiveness,” said the report approved by the group’s members, who include Cardinal Gerhard Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and Cardinal Walter Kasper, a theologian and former president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity.

The German-speaking group also provided detailed suggestions for responding to divorced and civilly remarried Catholics who want to receive the sacraments but, members said, “the discussions demonstrated that there are no simple and general solutions.”

They cited St John Paul II’s statement in the 1981 exhortation Familiaris Consortio, that pastors “must know that, for the sake of truth, they are obliged to exercise careful discernment of situations. There is in fact a difference between those who have sincerely tried to save their first marriage and have been unjustly abandoned, and those who through their own grave fault have destroyed a canonically valid marriage. Finally, there are those who have entered into a second union for the sake of the children’s upbringing, and who are sometimes subjectively certain in conscience that their previous and irreparably destroyed marriage had never been valid.”

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Bishop of Chichester George Bell’s sex abuse victim gets compensation

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A victim who was sexually abused as a young child by a former Bishop of Chichester who died in the 1950s has received compensation from the Church.

Allegations against the Rt Rev George Bell were first made by the victim in 1995 but were not investigated or referred to the police.

Bell was Bishop of Chichester from 1929 until his death in October 1958.

Current Bishop Dr Martin Warner issued a formal apology after the Diocese of Chichester settled the civil claim.

‘Remains bitter’

He paid tribute to the victim’s courage in coming forward to report the abuse.

“I am committed to ensuring that the past is handled with honesty and transparency,” he said.

The allegations of sexual offences against Bell date from the late 1940s and early 1950s and concern an individual who was at the time a young child.

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Church of England bishop George Bell abused young child

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Harriet Sherwood Religion correspondent
@harrietsherwood
Thursday 22 October 2015

The Church of England has issued a formal apology for sexual abuse committed by one of its most senior figures after settling a civil claim brought against George Bell, the late bishop of Chichester, who died 57 years ago.

The bishop abused a young child, whose identity and gender has not been disclosed, in the 1940s and 50s. The survivor first came forward 20 years ago, but the matter was not investigated or referred to police at the time.

Bell, who sat in the House of Lords, was once tipped as a possible archbishop of Canterbury, although his opposition to the bombing of German civilians by the RAF during the second world war was thought to have counted against him.

The church settled the claim at the end of September and on Thursday released a letter from the serving bishop of Chichester, Martin Warner, to the survivor expressing “deep sorrow” and apologising for a “devastating betrayal of trust”.

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At Vatican synod: outreach, pushback and struggles over soul of the church

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By Anthony Faiola October 22

VATICAN CITY — At one point during a major summit of the Roman Catholic hierarchy that ends this weekend, a senior conservative bishop took the floor inside the Vatican’s assembly hall and promptly charged his liberal peers with doing the devil’s work.

The three-week gathering, known as a synod, has erupted into a theological slugfest over Pope Francis’s vision for a more inclusive church, displaying the most bitter and public infighting since the heady days of Catholic reform in the 1960s.

Archbishop Tomash Peta of Kazakhstan captured the intensity of the divide, raising eyebrows — and even a few incredulous laughs — as he decried some of the policy changes being floated at the synod as having the scent of “infernal smoke.”

It was just another day at a synod that — more than any single event since Francis began his papacy in 2013 — has highlighted the extent his outreach to once-scorned Catholics has triggered a tug-of-war for the soul of the Catholic Church. More important, it underscored just how hard it may be for Francis to recast the church he serves in his image.

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UPDATE: Abuse victim’s 1995 complaint against deceased bishop ‘not properly listened to’

UNITED KINGDOM
Chichester Obsever

A sex abuse victim of former Bishop of Chichester George Bell remains ‘bitter’ an earlier complaint was not followed up, according to a solicitor.

The Bishop of Chichester in 1995 Eric Kemp was told of the allegations but did not refer it to police, according to the victim’s solicitor Tracey Emmott.

“The new culture of openness in the Church of England is genuinely refreshing and seems to represent a proper recognition of the dark secrets of its past, many of which may still not have come to light,” she said.

“While my client is glad this case is over, they remain bitter that their 1995 complaint was not properly listened to or dealt with until my client made contact with Archbishop Justin Welby’s office in 2013.

“That failure to respond properly was very damaging, and combined with the abuse that was suffered has had a profound effect on my client’s life.

“For my client, the compensation finally received does not change anything. How could any amount of money possibly compensate for childhood abuse?

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Polish bishop defrocks gay priest who sparked Vatican fury

POLAND
Yahoo! News

Warsaw (AFP) – A Polish bishop on Wednesday defrocked a high-ranking Catholic priest fired by a furious Vatican earlier this month after he came out as gay on the eve of a key synod on the family.

Bishop Ryszard Kasyna has decided that Krzystof Charamsa should no longer be able to celebrate mass, administer sacraments like communion and baptism or wear a cassock, according to a statement on the website of their northern Pelplin diocese.

Charamsa had held a senior position working for the Vatican office for protecting Catholic dogma, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The 43-year-old priest sparked outrage at the Vatican on October 3 by publicly declaring his homosexuality — and presenting his Catalan boyfriend Eduardo — on the eve of a bishops’ synod set to touch on the divisive issue of the Catholic Church’s relationship to gay believers.

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EU-FUNDED ‘PEDOPHILE’ PRIEST WHO TRADED ASYLUM PAPERS FOR SEX WITH YOUNG ILLEGAL MIGRANTS FACES 10 YEARS

ITALY
Breitbart

A progressive Sicilian Catholic priest who took a commendable interest in the welfare of young African migrant boys is facing a significant jail sentence for extorting sex from them in return for residency permits.

Monsignor Don Sergio Librizzi, who sat on the local committee handling asylum claims to Italy and who was involved in a number of local charities and initiatives promoting the welfare of young boys was arrested last year and admitted his guilt, allowing him to be released from prison, reports La Repubblica. Although he is now under house arrest and wears an electronic tag, Sicily prosecutors are now seeking a 10-year custodial prison sentence for his having sex with young illegal migrants, reports TheLocal.it.

The charges against Msgr. Librizzi include sexual extortion and sexual violence, relating to his treatment of young migrants under his care as a manager of immigration centres, a member of the committee processing their applications, and an organiser of charities providing food, work, and training to young migrant men and boys. It is alleged he gave the boys money and political refuge papers in return for sexual favours.

La Repubblica reported in June that the priest had also been accused of abusing seminarians under his care in the 1990s. The youths allegedly involved were then aged between 14 and 16 years old, but decided to come forward to report the assaults as adults after his arrest. Msgr. Librizzi is also under investigation for mismanagement of charities.

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Attorney: Diocese of Duluth should pay millions to child abuse victim

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran Oct 21, 2015

Attorney Jeff Anderson asked jurors in Ramsey County Wednesday to award $11.7 million to a man who says he was sexually abused by a priest in the Diocese of Duluth when he was a teenager in the late 1970s.

The case is the first clergy sex abuse lawsuit to be argued in front of a jury in Minnesota since state lawmakers passed the Child Victims Act in 2013, according to available court records. The law opened a three-year window for people to file lawsuits for older incidents of abuse.

For decades, most clergy sex abuse cases in Minnesota had been settled privately or were tossed out of court. Earlier this year, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis prevented hundreds of cases from going to trial when it filed for bankruptcy.

Anderson has represented thousands of victims of clergy sex abuse across the country, but his cases are rarely decided by a jury. Two of his cases that went before juries in Minnesota attracted national attention — one in 1990, the other in 1996.

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Payout agreed to victim of abuse by most senior Anglican bishop yet

UNITED KINGDOM
Brighton and Hove News

By : Frank le Duc

A payout has been agreed to the victim of child sexual abuse at the hands of a man tipped to become Archbishop of Canterbury.

The Church of England settled the case relating the former Bishop of Chichester George Bell 20 years after the victim first complained.

The news comes just two weeks after another Bishop from the diocese – former Bishop of Lewes Peter Ball – was jailed for sexually abusing boys and young men.

The diocese covers Brighton and Hove and has its administrative offices in New Church Road, Hove.

The current Bishop of Chichester Martin Warner has written to Bishop Bell’s victim to express his “deep sorrow” in a formal apology sent after the church agreed an out of court settlement.

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Revered Bishop George Bell was a paedophile – Church of England

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By John Bingham, Religious Affairs Editor
22 Oct 2015

A former Church of England bishop revered as a peacemaker – and granted the closest thing Anglicanism has to a saint’s days – was a paedophile, the Church has acknowledged.

George Bell, who was bishop of Chichester for 30 years until his death in 1958, sexually assaulted a young boy, who is still alive, in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

The Church of England has issued a formal apology to the victim, who wishes to remain anonymous, and settled a legal claim for compensation.

The man first came forward in 1995 but his complaint was effectively ignored by the then Bishop of Chichester, Eric Kemp, who died in 2009.

It was not until he contacted the office of the current Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby, two years ago that the allegations were finally investigated properly.

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Pope Francis’ Plans for Inclusiveness Divide Bishops

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN and ELISABETTA POVOLEDO
OCT. 21, 2015

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis had encouraged bishops from more than 120 countries to speak freely when they gathered at the Vatican nearly three weeks ago for a broad discussion of family matters to guide the world’s 1.2 billion Roman Catholics. And speak freely, they have.

The result has been the most momentous, and contentious, meeting of bishops in the 50 years since the Second Vatican Council, which brought the church into the modern era. The meeting has exposed deep fault lines between traditionalists focused on shoring up doctrine, and those who want the church to be more open to Catholics who are divorced, gay, single parents or cohabiting.

As the bishops face a deadline Saturday to present their report to the pope, it is increasingly clear that Francis is struggling to build consensus for his vision of a more inclusive and decentralized church. The question is whether the pope, who has won the hearts of those in the pews, can persuade the bishops to help create a church that fully welcomes people with the kinds of family situations it now condemns.

“This is a pivotal moment of this pontificate,” said Roberto Rusconi, who teaches the history of Christianity at the University of Rome Tor Vergata, a state school. Pope Francis is sounding out the world’s bishops “to better understand whether they are going to follow his line or not.”

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Child sex abuse bill doesn’t seek justice for everyone

NEW YORK
Times Newsweekly

BY AUXILIARY BISHOP PAUL R. SANCHEZ

In reference to her Oct. 1 op-ed in The Queens Courier and Ridgewood Times, I agree with Assemblywoman Margaret Markey that our state and nation must do everything we can to eliminate child sex abuse and bring those accountable for such crimes to justice. Where Markey and the Catholic Church part ways is in her methodology.

To be clear, Assemblywoman Markey is not proposing changes to the criminal statute to allow offenders to be brought to trail and imprisoned. Indeed, the church has supported changes that would extend the period of statute of limitations for just such a purpose. Moreover, the church has supported extending the statute of limitations in a reasonable way so that both individuals and institutions might be civilly liable.

What we do not support is a half measure that fails to protect all our children and only seeks “justice” for some. Due to the extra protections given to public institutions in existing law, Assemblywoman Markey’s bill would not offer the same opportunities to bring time-barred lawsuits against public schools and municipalities as it would for the Catholic Church and other private institutions.

In the last decade, the Catholic Church, not unlike other institutions both public and private, has become painfully aware of our past failures to protect children. Today, no institution private or public is more diligent in the protection of young people and transparent when crimes and misconduct occur.

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Why Was I ‘Chosen’ to be Abused?

NEW MEXICO
New Mexico Survivors of Catholic Priest Abuse

Why was I ‘chosen’ to be abused? This is the first question I wanted answered. The fact is that I was not chosen for whom I was, but for the opportunity, I presented. This perpetrator did not go to find me on the street or break into my house, but unfortunately, due to my Catholic upbringing and the trust it fostered in me for all things Catholic, I delivered myself to his literal doorstep. In most priest-abuse cases, there is a proper and trusting relationship that develops before the abuse. In my case, I made contact with my abuser because I was eager to learn about the priesthood, since it was vocation that I was seriously considering. He did not abuse me the first or second time we met. It took a number of interactions where I now realize that he was grooming me for that ‘perfect’ opportunity. He leveraged the fact that I had spent a significant portion of my childhood listening to him every Sunday morning delivering mass on the radio and that I believed he was a priest that represented the values that I believed were universally Catholic and had been instilled in me through my weekly attendance of mass in the various parishes of the Archdiocese of Santa Fe I had belonged to.

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Japanese brain cancer specialist says he never examined pope

VATICAN CITY
Japan Today

By NICOLE WINFIELD and DANIELA PETROFF
Associated Press

OCT. 22, 2015

VATICAN CITY —
A Japanese brain cancer specialist identified in an Italian news report as having diagnosed a brain tumor in Pope Francis has denied ever examining the pontiff and says the reports are “completely false.”

Dr Takanori Fukushima, director of the Carolina Neuroscience Institute in Raleigh, North Carolina, issued a statement Wednesday through Duke University.

He said: “I have never medically examined the pope. These stories are completely false.”

Citing unnamed sources, the Italian news outlet National Daily said Fukushima had examined the pope and determined that the small dark spot on Francis’ brain was a tumor that could be treated without surgery.

The Vatican denied the reports Wednesday.

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Making the case for and against statutes of limitations on sex crimes

CALIFORNIA
KPCC

Statutes of limitations set limits on how long a person has after an event to take legal action pertaining to that event.

The idea is to protect the defendants from being accused for long periods of time and to encourage plaintiffs to be diligent about pursuing legal action. But where is the line between protecting defendants from being accused of a crime for years and protecting defendants from ever seeing the inside of a courtroom.

Joelle Casteix argues these laws are more likely to do the latter in a recent L.A. Times op-ed titled “Don’t let time shield sex predators.” Casteix was a victim of sexual abuse in her teens and says while she was able to prosecute the person who assaulted her, many other victims aren’t so fortunate. She says California’s sex crimes laws are “abysmally complicated” and that the deadlines for victims to come forward are “arbitrary — and downright confusing.”

How do you feel about statutes of limitations as they pertain to sex crimes? Would you support a reform of state statutes of limitations on certain crimes? When is a statute of limitations appropriate and when is it not?

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Royal Commission: Child abuse allegedly covered up by Geelong Grammar for decades

AUSTRALIA
ABC – The World Today

ELEANOR HALL: One of Australia’s most prestigious schools is back in the spotlight today over allegations it covered up sexual abuse at the school for decades.

A former headmaster at the Geelong Grammar School’s Highton Campus has taken the stand at the Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse.

Jessica Longbottom has been following the proceedings and she joins us now.

Jessica, former students who’ve alleged they were harmed have been waiting on the evidence of this former headmaster. What are the key allegations against him?

JESSICA LONGBOTTOM: Well Eleanor, at previous hearings we’ve heard that abuse flourished at Geelong Grammar in the 80s and 90s when at least two paedophiles were operating at the school.

And it was when Robert Bugg, who was the headmaster of the school’s Highton campus from 1981 to 1993, when he was in charge it was when one of the worst paedophiles was operating.

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New investigation called for into Wollongong priest abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Nick McLaren

An organisation supporting victims of child sex abuse has called for a full investigation into an alleged incident involving abuse of a primary schoolboy by a Wollongong priest in the 1980’s.

The claims against the priest, who is now an academic at the University of Wollongong, were aired as part of a court case into another Wollongong Catholic priest and former teacher, Father Patrick Kervin.

The allegation was aired in Albion Park local court on October 16, 2015.

The case was previously investigated by the Wollongong Archdiocese of the Catholic Church.

It was also referred to the NSW Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione and the Sex Crimes Squad with no charges laid.

But Nicky Davis from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, says a more thorough investigation is needed.

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Synod Briefs

ROME
The Irish Catholic

Those affected by abuse need extra special care – expert

Catholics who are too angry, disillusioned or afraid to return to the Church because of clerical sexual abuse need very special care, according to an observer attending the Synod of Bishops.

Maria Harries, a member of Australia’s Truth, Justice, Healing Council said in an interview that abuse by clergy has led to a crisis of faith and a loss of trust in the Church’s moral authority.

Explaining that many people no longer go to Mass, “because of the abuse and we have to work out ways to deal with that,” she said that the shockwaves of abuse and its mishandling can be felt across multiple generations and among extended families and friends.

Asking “how do you address now a community of pain, a community of agony and a community of trauma?” she also pointed out that those hurt by abuse include members of religious congregations who have been accused of doing little or nothing to stop abuse. Such religious who have “always lived good lives and who feel terribly tainted and embarrassed and traumatised by what their brothers have done” are also shattered or disoriented, making them “another set of victims” that needs recognition and a pastoral response, she said.

– See more at: http://www.irishcatholic.ie/article/synod-briefs#sthash.BWRXclYJ.dpuf

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Statement on the Rt. Revd George Bell (1883 -1958)

UNITED KINGDOM
Church of England

22 October 2015

The Bishop of Chichester has issued a formal apology following the settlement of a legal civil claim regarding sexual abuse against the Right Reverend George Bell, who was Bishop of Chichester from 1929 until his death on 3rd October 1958.

The allegations against Bell date from the late 1940s and early 1950s and concern allegations of sexual offences against an individual who was at the time a young child.

Following settlement of the claim the serving Bishop of Chichester, the Right Reverend Dr. Martin Warner, wrote to the survivor formally apologising and expressing his “deep sorrow” acknowledging that “the abuse of children is a criminal act and a devastating betrayal of trust that should never occur in any situation, particularly the church.”

Bishop Warner paid tribute to the survivor’s courage in coming forward to report the abuse and notes that “along with my colleagues throughout the church, I am committed to ensuring that the past is handled with honesty and transparency.”

Tracey Emmott, the solicitor for the survivor, today issued the following statement on behalf of her client:

“The new culture of openness in the Church of England is genuinely refreshing and seems to represent a proper recognition of the dark secrets of its past, many of which may still not have come to light. While my client is glad this case is over, they remain bitter that their 1995 complaint was not properly listened to or dealt with until my client made contact with Archbishop Justin Welby’s office in 2013. That failure to respond properly was very damaging, and combined with the abuse that was suffered has had a profound effect on my client’s life. For my client, the compensation finally received does not change anything. How could any amount of money possibly compensate for childhood abuse? However, my client recognises that it represents a token of apology. What mattered to my client most and has brought more closure than anything was the personal letter my client has recently received from the Bishop of Chichester.”

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Woman breaks down in court as former teacher faces sexual abuse charges

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Echo

James Johnson, Senior Reporter

A WOMAN broke down in tears in court as she relived the moments she claimed to have been sexually abused by a former Hampshire teacher and church youth leader.

Michael McKenna, 72, is alleged to have indecently assaulted the woman over a period of six years.

Bournemouth Crown Court saw an interview recorded with the alleged victim in which she claimed McKenna abused her hundreds of times from the age of 13.

The former science teacher taught at Applemore Technology College and is accused of carrying out the assaults at his home on Springfield Avenue, Holbury.

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Victims should be compensated before HIA inquiry ends, campaigners urge

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

Victims abused in church, voluntary and state-run children’s homes in Northern Ireland should be offered interim compensation payments before a long-running inquiry in to the crimes is completed, campaigners have urged.

Many former residents of institutions where abuse was committed are now old and cannot wait until the Historical Abuse Inquiry (HIA) finishes hearing evidence and produces an official report to Stormont, charity Survivors and Victims of Institutional Abuse (SAVIA) warned.

Retired judge Sir Anthony Hart is leading the HIA probe, one of the UK’s largest inquiries into physical, sexual and emotional harm to children at homes run by the church, state and voluntary organisations.

The inquiry was formally established in January 2013 by the Northern Ireland Executive to investigate child abuse which occurred in residential institutions over a 73-year period from 1922 to 1995.

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Vatican to Investigate Sexual Abuse Allegations Against Catholic Priest in Javakhk Armenian Village

ARMENIA
Hetq

The Vatican says it will investigate long standing rumors that a Catholic priest serving in the Samtskhe-Javakhk village of Tzghaltbila has sexually abused boys serving in the church.

The priest in question is Reverend Father Anatoly Ivanyuk, who has served as pastor in the Armenian-populated village, where most are Catholic, for the past 25 years.

The boys who allege to have been sexually abused by the priest haven’t raised the issue, either to local police or to the Vatican hierarchy. It’s a traditional and religious community and any such charges of pedophilia and homosexuality wouldn’t be taken seriously for starters. The boys are also fearful of being ridiculed by friends and family. They also are fearful of Father Anatoly.

Hetq has obtained testimony from some of the boys claiming to be sexually molested by the clergyman. They describe, in detail, what Father Anatoly did to them between 2001 and 2007 when serving as church acolytes.

The boys claim that Father Anatoly invited them to bathe in his house and that the incidents took place afterwards. (Naturally, we will not publish the names of these boys.)

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Minnesota boy sought refuge in church, was sexually abused instead

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Chao Xiong Star Tribune OCTOBER 21, 2015

John Doe 30 grew up in rural Minnesota the youngest of seven. He loved animals. He loved the Catholic Church.

But he didn’t fit in, his attorney Jeff Anderson said Wednesday, and he paid the price.

His brothers and classmates called him derogatory names because they thought he was effeminate.

The boy sought refuge at St. Thomas More parish in Lake Lillian, Minn. There, he met the Rev. James Vincent Fitzgerald, who took the boy, then 15, on a trip across the state in 1978 and sexually assaulted him while working for the Diocese of Duluth, Anderson told jurors.

“The evidence will show that [Doe 30] has lost his ability to trust …,” Anderson said in the opening statements of his civil case against the diocese, the first under the Minnesota Child Victims Act to go to trial. The 2013 law has allowed older claims of child sex abuse previously barred by statutes of limitations to have their day in court.

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Statement on the Rt. Revd George Bell (1883 -1958)

UNITED KINGDOM
Anglican Diocese of Chichester

The statement to follow communicates news that has brought us a bewildering mix of deep and disturbing emotions. In touching the legacy and reputation of George Bell, it yields a bitter fruit of great sadness and a sense that we are all diminished by what we are being told.

Our starting point is response to the survivor. We remain committed to listening to all allegations of abuse with an open mind. In this case, the scrutiny of the allegation has been thorough, objective, and undertaken by people who command the respect of all parties. We face with shame a story of abuse of a child; we also know that the burden of not being heard has made the experience so much worse. We apologise for the failures of the past.

The revelation of abuse demands bravery on the part of a survivor, and we respect the courage needed to tell the truth. We also recognise that telling the truth provides a legitimate opportunity for others to come forward, sometimes to identify the same source of abuse.

We also believe that in the Church of England as a whole, and certainly in the diocese of Chichester, we have done all we can to ensure that our safeguarding policies reflect best practice, and are fully and evenly implemented. The statement below speaks of an earlier report of this case, in the 1990’s. There will no doubt be some who allege a cover-up by the Church. We acknowledge that the response then would not be adequate by today’s standards, although that falls far short of a cover-up. In the present context, the diocese of Chichester has worked with Police and other agencies to ensure that we have sought the fullest understanding possible of what happened.

Please hold in your prayers all victims of abuse, especially those who have never been able to seek or receive help and a proper response. Please pray for all who are affected by this news, especially those who are our ecumenical partners, those unable to comprehend its implications, and those whose faith is damaged by it. Please pray for the diocese of Chichester, for each other, lay and ordained, as we seek to remain faithful to our apostolic mission in spite of much that could discourage and deter us.

+Martin

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Church apologises for ‘falling short’ in response to abuse allegations

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Thu 22 Oct 2015
By Antony Bushfield

The Church of England has issued a formally apology and said it feels “deep sorrow” for failing to properly deal with allegations of sexual abuse against the former Bishop of Chichester, Rt Revd George Bell.

Accusations that Bell abused a young child between the late 1940s and early 1950s were made in 1995 but the Church has now admitted the response “fell a long way short”.

The survivor told the then Bishop of Chichester, Eric Kemp, about the abuse in August 1995 but he was only offered pastoral support and the allegations were not referred to the police.

The Church said from the information it has, it seems Bishop Kemp did not investigate the matter further.

It was not until the claim was made to Lambeth Palace in 2013 that the survivor was put in touch with the safeguarding team at the Diocese of Chichester who referred the matter to the police and offered personal support and counselling to the survivor.

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BREAKING NEWS: Former Chichester bishop George Bell abused young child

UNITED KINGDOM
Chichester Observer

The Bishop of Chichester Martin Warner has today apologised after former diocese bishop George Bell was revealed as a paedophile.

The Right Reverend George Bell died in 1958 and he was Bishop of Chichester from 1929 until his death.

The apology follows the settlement of a legal civil claim regarding sexual abuse.

“The allegations against Bell date from the late 1940s and early 1950s and concern allegations of sexual offences against an individual who was at the time a young child,” said the statement from the diocese.

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Ex-Wigan vicar jailed for child abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
Wigan Today

A FORMER Wigan vicar has been jailed at the age of 91 for child abuse.

Rev Frank Baldwick is now facing excommunication, having earlier this year been found guilty of two counts of sexual assault against a boy more than 35 years ago.

The frail pensioner, who had denied the attacks at vicarages in both Bolton and Atherton, was sentenced at

Manchester Crown Court and the diocese which oversees his two former parishes says the conviction will ultimately lead to his being de-frocked.

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October 21, 2015

TJH Council: Days of Church investigating itself ‘must end’

AUSTRALIA
The Record

The days of the Church in Australia conducting its own investigations into child ¬sexual abuse “must be over”, according to the Chief Executive of the Truth, Justice and Healing Council, Francis Sullivan.

Mr Sullivan’s comments were published in The Weekend Australian on 16-17 October in response to a call for a national ¬redress scheme to compensate ¬victims of abuse.

“More than anything else, abuse survivors have been calling for fair and compassionate redress,” Mr Sullivan said.

“With the decisions about what this looks like taken out of the hands of the institutions responsible for the abuse,” he said.

“In the case of the Catholic Church, the days of the Church ¬investigating itself must be over.”

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Abuse victim seeks $9 million from Diocese of Duluth

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By Elizabeth Mohr, St. Paul Pioneer Press

ST. PAUL — There’s no dispute that the Rev. James Vincent Fitzgerald sexually abused a Minnesota teen in 1978, according to opposing attorneys in a lawsuit filed by the victim.

The question for a jury: Who supervised the priest when the abuse took place?

The victim’s attorney, Jeff Anderson, said during his opening statement Wednesday that the Diocese of Duluth was charged with overseeing the priest while he worked in one of its parishes, where the abuse took place.

The diocese’s attorney, Susan Gaertner — former Ramsey County attorney-turned-defense attorney — said that because Fitzgerald was an oblate priest, a member of a religious order, the leader of his order was in charge of his oversight, not the diocese where the order placed him.

“Doe 30” filed his lawsuit in early 2014 in Ramsey County District Court against the Diocese of Duluth, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate and the Diocese of New Ulm. The Duluth diocese is the sole remaining defendant; the oblates order settled with Doe 30 and the court dismissed the New Ulm diocese earlier this year.

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Mitigating the trauma of clergy sex abuse

UNITED STATES
Stop Baptist Predators

Christa Brown

“A life of wholeness does not depend on what we experience. Wholeness depends on how we experience our lives.”
— Desmond Tutu

I felt so honored when retired judge Sheila Murphy invited me to contribute a chapter for a book on restorative justice that Archbishop Desmond Tutu was supporting and writing an introduction for. I had never met Sheila before, but after my speech at the 2013 SNAP convention for clergy sex abuse survivors, Sheila introduced herself and pressed into my palm a yellow post-it note with these words: “Yoga as Restorative Justice.” That was the topic she wanted me to write about. I looked at my palm, looked at her, and then said, “Huh?”

Fortunately, Sheila wasn’t deterred by my monosyllabic response. “You may not have used the language of restorative justice,” she said, “but I think it’s what you were really talking about just now in your speech.”

“It was?” Again, any pretense of wit or wisdom eluded me.

But ultimately, the more we talked, the more I decided that Sheila was right. It’s funny how communication is a two-way street like that. Sometimes, what gets communicated depends as much on what’s in the mind of the listener as it does on what comes out the mouth of the speaker. Sheila had heard more in my speech than what even I had realized I was saying.

So, I wrote the chapter, and the book has recently been released. You can read my chapter here: “Yoga as a Practice of Restorative Justice.”

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The ‘Blogging Bishop of Brisbane’ dishes on the real story of Vatican synod

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

David Gibson | October 21, 2015

VATICAN CITY (RNS) Barrels of ink, digital and real, have been spilled by journalists trying to convey the gravity of the high-stakes debate on church teaching in Rome this month, as the melodrama that a closed-door Vatican gathering of some 270 churchmen almost guarantees.

The synod, as it’s called, has it all: steady leaks to the press, rumors of lavish dinners and reports of intense lobbying, plus open disagreements over doctrine. It’s a steady diet of soap opera and theology, and almost too much for any reporter to keep up with.

Which is why, if you want to know what it’s like to be a player in such an event, and in the extracurricular socializing where much of the work is done, you have to read the blog of Australian Archbishop Mark Coleridge.

The 67-year-old head of the Archdiocese of Brisbane has been writing his online diary nearly every day since he left for Rome on Oct. 1, offering witty, chatty postings that provide equal helpings of dish and doctrine. It’s made him something of an Internet sensation back home and the media star of the Anglophone world at the Vatican.

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Archdiocese defends record as film about Boston priest abuse nears release

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

WRITTEN BY MITCH DUDEK POSTED: 10/21/2015

In an unprecedented public relations maneuver, top Chicago Archdiocese officials met with several newspapers this week — days before the big screen release of a star-studded Hollywood drama depicting the Boston Globe’s 2002 expose on clergy sex abuse — to say, basically: “Don’t confuse us with Boston.”

Vicar General Ronald Hicks, second-in-command to Archbishop Blase Cupich, explained the proactive stance to the Sun-Times’ editorial board earlier this week.

“We think there’s a possibility that there’s going to be new energy and new questions around this and what we want to do is make sure that the media knows that Chicago is extremely different in handling the case of clerical sexual abuse of minors than Boston and how it’s being portrayed in the movie.”

Actors Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo play the journalists behind the Pulitzer-Prize-winning stories that shook the world in 2002, and ultimately encouraged a large number of victims in other cities, including Chicago, to come forth with their own tales of abuse, setting off a global crisis for the church.

The film, “Spotlight,” debuts locally at the Chicago Film Festival Oct. 29 and is scheduled for wider release Nov. 6.

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Lack of settlement in Diocese case frustrates judge

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Oct. 17, 2015

Thuma warns he may remand abuse cases back to state court

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

ALBUQUERQUE – As the Diocese of Gallup’s Chapter 11 case nears its second year in bankruptcy court, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma expressed frustration that the case has yet to be settled.

“I’m trying to figure out the best way to get this case resolved,” Thuma told nearly a dozen attorneys during a court hearing Thursday. “I’m not sure it’s anybody’s fault, but we’re here two years in the case and we don’t have a settlement, and the parties are very much at odds at the moment.”

Attorneys for the Gallup Diocese requested the hearing Thursday to address an emergency motion to continue a final hearing slated for Nov. 10. That final hearing, which was also referred to as a trial, centered on motions to lift the bankruptcy case’s automatic stay that prohibits civil lawsuits against the diocese from moving forward.

Phoenix attorney Robert E. Pastor, who represents 18 clergy sex abuse claimants in the case, had filed the lift stay motions. Prior to the Diocese of Gallup filing its Chapter 11 petition, Pastor had filed 13 clergy sex abuse lawsuits against the diocese in Flagstaff’s Coconino County Superior Court. With the lift stay motions, Pastor was requesting Thuma to allow two or three of his lawsuits to be remanded back to state court for trial.

The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, which advocates on behalf of the interests of clergy sex abuse claimants, is supportive of Pastor’s efforts. Both Pastor and attorneys for the committee have argued that trying the cases before a Flagstaff jury will “educate” the diocese and its insurance companies about the value of the claims.

“If I believed that letting these cases go forward would prompt settlement, I wouldn’t be standing in front of you,” Susan Boswell, the lead bankruptcy attorney for the diocese, told Thuma.

Boswell said the Gallup Diocese had an obligation to oppose lifting the stays because diocesan officials believe there would be a detrimental impact to the estate as a whole, including to all the claimants and other creditors.

Settlement roadblocks

During the hearing, Thuma heard opposing statements from Boswell, Pastor and Ilan Scharf, an attorney for the committee, about discovery requests concerning documents and depositions of witnesses related to the lift stay final hearing on Nov. 10.

Thuma, however, seemed more interested in the larger picture of what roadblocks were continuing to impede a settlement among the various parties. Throughout the hearing, the judge asked a number of questions of the attorneys, particularly questions about negotiations with insurance companies.

According to Boswell, the diocese had no insurance coverage before 1965. From 1965 until Dec. 1, 1977, the diocese was covered by a company that later went into receivership. Claims under that company are now covered by the New Mexico Property Casualty Insurance Guaranty Fund. And since Dec. 1, 1977, the diocese has been covered by insurance from Catholic Mutual.

Boswell told Thuma the diocese was attempting to resolve a dispute with the New Mexico Guaranty Fund over insurance coverage. However, the possibility of filing a declaratory judgment action against the Fund was still a possibility.

Thuma questioned why the three cases named in Pastor’s lift stay motions include one claim that is not covered by insurance and two claims that are under the limited coverage of the New Mexico Guaranty Fund. He expressed reluctance to allow Pastor’s first case, which was four months away from trial when the Gallup Diocese filed its Chapter 11 petition, to be the “test case” since it is the claim not covered by insurance.

Scharf explained the case involved a perpetrator who abused many claimants, and the other two cases were representative claims with respect to particular abusers or co-defendants.

Warning to attorneys

At the hearing’s conclusion, Thuma agreed to the diocese’s request to grant a continuance on the final hearing on the stay relief motions. In its place he scheduled a status conference Nov. 10.

Because another session of formal mediation talks is scheduled for Dec. 3-4, and both Boswell and Scharf agreed that informal mediation discussions continue to be ongoing, Thuma stressed the importance of achieving a settlement of the case by the end of the year.

If that doesn’t happen, Thuma warned the attorneys, he will consider granting stay relief for two cases — but two cases with insurance coverage — so the diocese’s estate won’t be burdened with the defense costs.

“What I want to do is to have a status conference shortly after mediation, and if the thing isn’t moving toward settlement, I want Mr. Pastor and the committee to go through their list of claims and tell me which claims against New Mexico Guaranty or Catholic Mutual can get teed-up the quickest,” Thuma said. “And I’m inclined to grant stay relief just to try it out … I’m ready to try something if we’re not palpably closer to settlement in December than we are today.”

“There’s so much very expensive litigation we can do in this case before the net recovery to the abuse victims is zero,” Thuma said. “Everyone needs to think about that a little bit harder than they have been because you’re not doing a service to your clients if that’s your result.”

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Polish church suspends priest who came out as gay on eve of world bishops meeting

POLAND
Fox News

AP

WARSAW, Poland – A Polish priest who lost his job at the Vatican earlier this month after revealing that he is gay and has a boyfriend has been suspended by the church in Poland from performing the functions of a priest.

Krzysztof Charamsa, 43, came out as gay and criticized the Vatican for its approach to homosexuality on the eve of a major meeting of world bishops in Rome. The Vatican immediately fired him from his job with the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith.

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Bill Heffernan ‘paedophile list’ allegation: former royal commissioner James Wood

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

[with video]

October 21, 2015

Jane Lee and Latika Bourke

A former royal commissioner has hit back at claims by senator Bill Heffernan that he failed to properly investigate lawyers who allegedly attended a “boy brothel”, as new details emerge of a “secret list” containing the names of high-profile alleged paedophiles.

The controversial Liberal senator used parliamentary privilege on Wednesday to claim that a former Australian prime minister was on the list, which he claims forms part of a police document.

Many of the people on the list and otherwise named in the documents were “prominent”, Senator Heffernan said: “They were delivered to me by a police agency some time ago because no one seems to want to deal with them.”

He also claimed every Commonwealth attorney-general since Philip Ruddock had seen the list.
Fairfax Media understands Mr Ruddock referred Senator Heffernan’s list to his department when he was the federal attorney-general in the Howard government between 2003 and 2007.

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