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.

December 12, 2015

Email to Cardinal details ‘pee drinking’ priest’s alleged affair

NEW YORK
news.com.au

THE scorned ex-girlfriend of an S&M “master” to a Catholic priest went right to the top and sent the Archbishop of New York e-mails that were hardly suitable for church — laying out details of the romps that were allegedly funded with cash skimmed from the poor box.

Tatyana Gudin shared with The New York Post her message to Timothy Cardinal Dolan that recounted how the Reverend Peter Miqueli allegedly wore a locked Lucite chastity belt along with a dog collar during pricey sessions with his bodybuilder lover.

She also claimed to the pope’s right-hand man in America that Miqueli had an interfaith fantasy of being humiliated in Borough Park, Brooklyn, in front of a “nice Jewish girl.”

Miqueli, meanwhile, remained a pastor of St. Frances de Chantal in the Throggs Neck neighbourhood of The Bronx on Friday.

Gudin wrote to Dolan about Miqueli’s tastes in high-end booze and claimed he paid for many of their luxuries by putting his boyfriend in charge of a church thrift shop.

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

National redress disappointment, Ballarat hearing resumes

AUSTRALIA
Truth Justice and Healing Council

Francis Sullivan, December 9, 2015

This week AAP reports thousands of child sex abuse survivors expecting the Turnbull government to commit to a national redress scheme before Christmas face bitter disappointment.

According to the AAP report hopes the government would, in line with the final recommendation of the child abuse royal commission, announce by year’s end its backing of a $4.3 billion scheme are fading, principally because some states are reluctant to come on board.

NSW and Victoria support a national scheme. South Australia doesn’t. Other states are yet to commit. But the states have written to the Prime Minister asking him to clarify the Federal Government’s position.

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.

TJHC welcomes release of Royal Commission findings into Marist Brothers Canberra hearing

AUSTRALIA
Truth Justice and Healing Council

11 December, 2015

The Truth Justice and Healing Council has welcomed the release of the Royal Commission’s final report into Case Study 13 which examined the response of the Marist Brothers to allegations of child sexual abuse against Brother Kostka Chute and former Brother, Gregory Sutton.

The report was released today (Friday 11 December 2015) following a public hearing held in Canberra and Sydney in June, July and August 2014 which investigated allegations against Chute and Sutton in schools in the ACT, NSW and Queensland.

Mr Francis Sullivan, CEO of the Catholic Church’s Truth Justice and Healing Council, said the report made a range of comments on people involved with Chute and Sutton and the way in which they had dealt with claims of abuse made against them over a number of years.

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

Duluth Diocese may use mediator to negotiate bankruptcy

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By Riham Feshir, MPR.org / 100.5 FM on Dec 11, 2015

The Diocese of Duluth may negotiate its bankruptcy case outside of the courtroom.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert Kressel has encouraged the Diocese of Duluth and all parties involved, including attorneys for sex abuse victims and insurers, to work with a mediator to come to a resolution.

The Diocese of Duluth filed for bankruptcy protection earlier this week. The decision comes a month after a jury ordered the diocese and a Catholic religious order to pay more than $8 million in damages to a man who was sexually abused by a priest in 1978. The diocese said it can’t afford its $5 million share of the settlement and filed for bankruptcy.

Mike Finnegan, a St. Paul attorney for abuse victims who’ve filed lawsuits against the diocese, said mediation is a less-costly way to work through litigation when there are numerous parties involved. He did not argue against using a mediator.

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.

Victims left reeling from shock Cardinal George Pell decision

AUSTRALIA
Great Lakes Advocate

By Melissa Cunningham and Matthew Dixon
Dec. 11, 2015

CLERGY sex abuse survivors have been left reeling by news Cardinal George Pell will not be appearing at the child sex abuse inquiry next week.

Victim and nephew of disgraced priest Gerard Ridsdale said the lives of survivors had been thrown into turmoil again.

He called for Cardinal Pell to “come and face the music” like the survivors have had been forced to do for years.

Cardinal Pell is unable to make his anticipated appearance at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse next week due to ill health, his lawyer has said.

Cardinal Pell’s counsel, Allan Myers QC, told the hearing on Friday that Cardinal Pell, who is based in Rome, had “serious health conditions” and would be unable to fly to Australia to appear at the inquiry on Wednesday.

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

The Boston Globe, Open Road Films, Participant Media, First Look Media presents Spotlight Investigative Journalism Fellowship

UNITED STATES
News & Tech

The Boston Globe on Wednesday presented the Spotlight Investigative Journalism Fellowship aimed at supporting the work of investigative journalists. A $100,000 fellowship will be awarded to an individual or team of journalists to provide resources and support to pursue an in-depth investigative story with the opportunity to publish it in The Boston Globe. The fellowship is funded by Participant Media and Open Road Films with support from First Look Media.

The fellowship was inspired by The Boston Globe Spotlight Team’s Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church as portrayed in the feature film Spotlight.

“The Boston Globe has an unwavering commitment to produce high-impact investigative stories that pierce secrecy and shine a light on issues, individuals, and institutions to expose the truth,” said Brian McGrory, Boston Globe editor. “Whether it is the Spotlight Team’s investigation of the Catholic Church in 2002; its relentless reporting of the criminal dealings of James ‘Whitey’ Bulger and his ties to federal law enforcement; or its most recent report on hospitals where doctors are running two surgeries at once, accountability reporting is an integral part of The Boston Globe’s daily coverage.”

The Spotlight Investigative Journalism Fellowship is available to journalists with a substantial body of work published in major media outlets. Story submissions should have a U.S. domestic focus and be of public interest. Consideration will be given for proposals that investigate serious wrongdoing and abuse of power in the public or private sectors. As part of the fellowship, the fellow(s) will collaborate with an investigative journalist from The Boston Globe’s Spotlight Team and also receive support and guidance from the Globe’s editorial team as well as the First Look Media team.

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

Refund policy not extended to Catholic sex abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Chronicle

Tara Miko | 12th Dec 2015

THE Catholic Diocese of Toowoomba will await the findings of the Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse before deciding whether it will refund tuition fees to abuse victims.

It comes as the Anglican Diocese of Southern Queensland this week confirmed it would refund tuition and boarding fees to confirmed victims of abuse and had begun advertising to locate them.

The 13 child victims, aged eight to 10 years at the time, of jailed former school teacher Gerard Byrnes would be eligible to have the fees refunded if the diocese were to adopt a similar policy.

The abuse was reported in September, 2007.

But a diocese spokesman said the inquiry commissioner found the church’s response to abuse had been adequate and would await the commission’s final outcomes before considering any further policies.

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

Spotlight film on ‘Boston Globe’s’ clerical sex abuse reveal is old-fashioned journalism at it’s best

UNITED STATES
Irish Examiner

Saturday, December 12, 2015

The ’Boston Globe’s’ probe into the cover-up of clerical child sex abuse in Massachusetts has made it to the big screen, writes Michael Clifford

When Tom McCarthy was studying in Boston College, he occasionally found himself next door to the campus in the residence of the Archbishop of Boston, Cardinal Bernard Law.

College life spilled over into the Cardinal’s residence through playing football in the extensive grounds. McCarthy remembers the sense of power that exuded from the bishop’s palace.

The young Irish American student from Providence Rhode Island wouldn’t have known it but within two decades he would be back to document the demise of the same cardinal who had appeared to bestride the Boston area and beyond.

Now an established name in the Hollywood firmament, McCarthy is the director and co-writer of Spotlight, a movie based on newspaper investigation into the cover-up of clerical sexual abuse which led to the cardinal’s resignation.

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

Priest Accused of Using Donations for S&M Kink

NEW YORK
Courthouse News Service

By NICK RUMMELL

MANHATTAN (CN) – Parishioners at two Roman Catholic Churches in New York claim in court that their pastor routinely dipped into donation baskets to fund an illicit lifestyle of sex, drugs and sadomasochistic rituals.

In a lawsuit filed in New York County Supreme Court on Dec. 10, the plaintiffs, parishioners at St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church, on Roosevelt Island, and at St. Frances De Chantal Church, in the Bronx, say they became deeply concerned about how Father Peter Miqueli was handling donations after maintenance workers allegedly stumbled onto the stacks of cash in a church rectory.

In 2014, a group of parishioners set up a website to detail accusations of malfeasance by the pastor, and to share their concerns about an alleged cover-up.

The plaintiffs claim they shared these concerns with Bishop Gerald Walsh, but the archdiocese did nothing to investigation their allegations.

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

Bishop criticised in Murphy Report dies

IRELAND
Herald

Sarah MacDonald – 12 December 2015

One of the bishops most strongly criticised in the Murphy Report over his handling of allegations of clerical sexual abuse in the archdiocese of Dublin has died.

Auxiliary Bishop Dermot O’Mahony was 80 and had been ill for some time.

In a statement, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin expressed his sympathy and said the priests of Dublin were “saddened” by the news of his passing as he held, over many years, several roles of leadership and responsibility.

Fraught

However, the relationship between Archbishop Martin and Bishop O’Mahony is known to have been fraught. They clashed very publicly in 2010 over the findings of the Murphy Report, which Dr O’Mahony challenged publicly and privately.

The report highlighted how he failed to tell either the National Rehabilitation Hospital, Dublin diocesan authorities or the gardai that Fr Noel Reynolds had a problem with child sexual abuse.

Fr Reynolds later admitted sexually abusing over 100 children, while a chaplain to the hospital at the time, and in eight parishes.

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.

Local View: We must share concern for all innocent people victimized by abusers or accusers

MINNESOTA
Duluth News Tribune

By The Rev. William C. Graham on Dec 11, 2015

The approaching end of the year and the shortened days make it seem to some folks that the end days are upon us, that all things are collapsing, and that the world is about to end. The recent horrific events in San Bernardino, Colorado Springs and Paris certainly heighten our fear, as do the Beirut bombings and the downing of the Russian civilian jetliner.

Violent and unexpected death, injury, suffering and terrorism all have captured the attention of people everywhere, and we see how fragile our civilization is, how delicate the balance of our peace is, and how vulnerable we are to the forces of evil.

In our day, in our own nation, the Catholic Church is reeling still from the effects of its own crisis; and, locally, it seems very clear that Catholic bishops will be spending a lot of time in court in the next years, seeking to settle legal cases involving priests and victims who, for the most part, are unknown to them. The number of court cases pending against Catholic dioceses in Minnesota is staggering, and it seems likely every Minnesota diocese could be in bankruptcy before the cases are resolved (“Diocese of Duluth files for bankruptcy,” Dec. 8).

Catholics and all people of good will share the devastating effects of this crisis. First, we mourn with all of those who have suffered as victims. We want to see justice done, healing promoted and charity fulfilled.

We must also be aware of and acknowledge the anger that many people feel, and their disappointment, too. Our pews in America are emptying not because people disbelieve the gospel but because we the Church have not been effective and holy stewards to inspire hope and confidence among the people of God.

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 pupil at Sydney boys’ home reveals ‘had his penis CUT OFF by a teacher who who didn’t like students with foreskins’

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By MARTHA AZZI FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

At the age of 13, Gordon Myers allegedly woke up to find ‘blood everywhere’ after his teacher performed a botched circumcision because he ‘didn’t like little boys with foreskins.’

Mr Myer’s, 50, attended Daruk Training School in Windsor, a Sydney boys’ home in 1978, for five years during which he claims he was raped and bashed by some staff, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse heard.

A member of the school performed the illegal circumcision after claiming to have received permission, reported the Mercury.

‘He knocked me out with a needle and I woke up in the middle of it and there was (a second staff member there as well), I screamed in pain. …

The revelations of this shocking alleged abuse come as victims criticise Cardinal George Pell for postponing his royal commission appearance due to ill-health.

Cardinal Pell was to appear before the child abuse royal commission in Melbourne next week but will now front a Ballarat sitting in February.

Stephen Woods was among victims of pedophile priests outraged by Cardinal Pell’s attempt to give his evidence via videolink from Rome next week, due to a worsened heart condition.

‘Being held in February, that’s fine, but of course the victims are still waiting,’ Mr Woods told reporters.

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.

December 11, 2015

Former Bishop Watterson Teacher Accused Of Abuse Accepts To Plea Agreement

OHIO
10 TV

A former Bishop Watterson Teacher accused of sexual misconduct with a student has accepted a plea agreement.

Brian Sze agreed to a plea deal of coercing a minor in acts for child pornography.

The charges carry a possible sentence of 15 to 30 years in prison.

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.

Winona diocese facing new sex abuse allegations

MINNESOTA
Winona Daily News

By Jerome Christenson

Allegations of sexual abuse by a priest employed by the Diocese of Winona more than five decades ago have been made public by the Diocese and St. Mary’s Parish in Winona.

In a letter to parishioners dated Dec. 4, Rev. Jim Berning wrote that “… the Church of St. Mary’s has been named as a defendant with the Diocese of Winona in a lawsuit alleging sexual abuse in 1962 by Fr. Richard Hatch, a deceased priest of the Diocese of Winona.”

The plaintiff in the suit has not been identified.

A statement by the diocese released Friday confirmed Berning’s letter and noted that Hatch was among the priests who were named publicly as “credibly accused” of sexual abuse two years ago and whose personnel files were made public in October 2014. Those names and files were released as part of the settlement agreement that concluded a suit brought against the Winona diocese and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

In a prepared statement, Winona Bishop John Quinn said, “We are committed to address all allegations of sexual abuse and will work in full cooperation as this process unfolds.”

Vicar general Richard Colletti said the bishop will be at St. Mary’s Sunday to pray with parishioners and reassure them that he and the diocese would stand with them.

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

New ‘Spotlight’ TV Ad Debuts This Weekend – Watch

UNITED STATES
Deadline

EXCLUSIVE: Open Road Film is keeping Spotlight in the spotlight with a new 30-second ad for the movie, which has had a good week with an Outstanding Cast nom (and a supporting one for Rachel McAdams) from the SAG Awards and Best Picture Drama, Director and Screenplay noms yesterday from the Golden Globes. Those come after wins from critics groups last week.

Spotlight, directed by Tom McCarthy from a script by him and Josh Singer, features an ensemble cast that includes Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, McAdams, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery and Brian d’Arcy James. They play the team of Boston Globe reporters who exposed the Boston Archdiocese cover-up of pedophile priests in the Catholic Church that led to the forced resignation of the all-powerful Cardinal Bernard Law.

The pic opened in theaters November 6, a bit before the crush of awards-season films that are now crowding the marketplace, so the ad will keep it front-of-mind for both moviegoers and Oscar voters. The movie has grossed $17.5 million to date at the domestic box office.

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

Child sex abuse inquiry: Victims angry as health issues see Cardinal Pell delay giving evidence

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Stephanie Chalkley-Rhoden and staff

Victims of child sex abuse and their families are angry at Cardinal George Pell’s delay in giving evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Cardinal Pell’s long-awaited appearance at the inquiry has been delayed after his lawyers said he was suffering from a heart condition which made him too sick to travel to Australia.

Allan Myers QC applied for Cardinal Pell, who is based in Rome, to give his testimony via video link instead, a request which was denied by the inquiry’s chair, Justice Peter McClellan.

Justice McClellan said he would call Cardinal Pell to give evidence before the inquiry in Ballarat, a diocese that has been described by victims as being a “centre of sex crimes against children”, in February.

“It is preferable that his evidence be given in person in Australia,” Justice McClellan said.

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

The Cost of Silence

CANADA
The News

Adam MacInnis
Published on December 11, 2015

How do you know when a story someone is telling you is true? As a journalist, it’s something I struggle with often. This story is about two people and events that happened in the mid 1980s. Only they know the truth – Lewis Stevens and a man he alleges abused him. What further complicates the situation is the second man is dead. Perhaps some would remember him as a godly man – ‘a gentleman’ as one described him. Stevens remembers him as an alcoholic, an abuser. Officially, though, the man was never charged and there was no other allegation of abuse made against him that I could find record of.

The intent of this article is not to let a pall of suspicion fall on all who served faithfully in the area during those years.

But silence is never an answer to possible sins of the past. The Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal of the last century taught us that.

This alleged chapter begins inside a Pictou County church.

Lewis Stevens recalls the smell of cigarettes blended with hard liquor. The odour is in his face, over his neck, emanating from an unlikely source – the priest of his church.

But as Stevens would learn, this Father is not what anyone would expect a man of God to be.

Growing up in Pictou County in the 1980s, Stevens was a typical boy of a religious family who was actively involved in the local parish. His mother attended faithfully, was a member of the Catholic Women’s League and at times worked there. His family members were baptized there, and he had the role of altar server. For some the church in those days held heavy sway over their lives; it controlled man’s most precious possession – his soul.

The church was a place Stevens loved. For a time he thought he might like to go into ministry. But something changed him – someone.

Stevens was like many other teens looking for money, and considered himself fortunate to get work doing odd jobs at the church – shoveling snow off the steps in the winter and mowing the lawns in the summer. Everything was normal about it.

But it soon began to drift from typical to troubling.

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

Duluth Diocese to Enter Mediation With Abuse Victims

MINNESOTA
Wall Street Journal

By TOM CORRIGAN

The Diocese of Duluth, Minn., is expected to enter mediation with clergy sexual abuse victims, following in the footsteps of other bankrupt dioceses that have sought to resolve growing legal and financial turmoil tied to the abuse crisis.

Ford Elsaesser, a lawyer for the diocese, said Friday that the diocese will “very likely” seek the appointment of a mediator. Mediation is likely the best opportunity to resolve the diocese’s bankruptcy case, which was filed Monday, through a settlement that compensates victims and also protects the church from future litigation.

“We’re hoping that this will follow the Helena model as opposed to some of the other case,” Mr. Elsaesser said.

The Diocese of Helena, Mont., which filed for bankruptcy in January 2014, spent less than five hours in court, resolving much of its case in mediation. Other diocesan bankruptcies have stretched out over years, racking up huge legal bills.

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

Cardinal Pell unable to fly to Australia for sex abuse inquiry because of pre-existing heart condition

AUSTRALIA
The Tablet (UK)

11 December 2015 by Christopher Lamb in Rome

Cardinal George Pell will not travel to Australia next week to give evidence to the country’s royal commission into abuse due to ill health.

A statement from his office said that due to a pre-existing heart condition a cardiologist in Rome has said it is not safe for the 74-year-old cardinal, who is Prefect of the Secretariat of the Economy in the Vatican, to make long haul flights.

On Friday the cardinal’s lawyer, Allan Myers, QC, asked the judge leading the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Melbourne for the Australian cardinal to give evidence by video link.

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.

Heart condition forces Cardinal Pell to postpone testimony for Australian sex-abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Culture

December 11, 2015

Cardinal George Pell, who was expected to testify next week before a royal commission investigating sexual abuse in Australia, has announced that he will be unable to appear because of ill health.

The Australian prelate, who now serves as the Vatican’s prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, has been advised by his physician that he should not attempt the long trip to his native country because of a deteriorating heart condition.

Cardinal Pell volunteered to testify next week by a video link. But the chairman of the royal commission, Justice Peter McClellan, said that the panel will postpone the cardinal’s testimony until February, hoping that his health improves.

Cardinal Pell’s office said that he had already booked airline tickets to make his scheduled appearance on December 16, “and until the middle of this week was determined to return to give evidence in person.” The cardinal who has been accused of ignoring evidence of sexual abuse, has insisted that he wants to testify to defend himself against the charges, which he says are baseless.

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.

Victims angry over Pell commission delay

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Victims are angry Cardinal George Pell’s postponed royal commission appearance means they have to wait even longer for the Catholic Church to be held accountable.

Cardinal Pell was to appear before the child abuse royal commission in Melbourne next week but will now front a Ballarat sitting in February.

Stephen Woods was among victims of pedophile priests outraged by Cardinal Pell’s attempt to give his evidence via videolink from Rome next week, due to a worsened heart condition.

‘Being held in February, that’s fine, but of course the victims are still waiting,’ Mr Woods told reporters.

‘We’ve been waiting years. Yet again the victims have to pay the price of an organisation that just does not want to be held accountable.’

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.

Make it safer for sexual violence survivors to name perpetrators

UNITED STATES
The Mennonite

Written By: Stephanie Krehbiel

In August, together with 10 other Mennonite or formerly Mennonite advocates for survivors of sexual violence, I attended the annual conference of the Survivors Network for Those Abused by Priests. SNAP is a 30-year-old organization formed by Catholic survivors of clergy sexual abuse. It has since branched out to serve survivors whose abuse occurred in different faith traditions.

After two days of conference sessions, our Mennonite SNAP group gathered to compare notes, get to know one another better and plan for the future. We discussed our experiences with church leaders and law enforcement. In that trusted company and the privacy of that room, we shared name after name: of rapists, molesters, harassers, and predators. We also named Mennonite pastors, deacons, administrators and elders who, through complicity or passive silence, helped allow the violence to happen.

One overriding theme of our conversation was the retribution and fallout faced by survivors who come forward with the names of their abusers.

We face a dilemma that has confounded survivors’ advocates for years. We can’t do much of anything to stop sexual violence when perpetrators are allowed to hurt people without accountability. Still, it is hard to counsel survivors to name their perpetrators when the consequences of that action are so routinely vicious. All of us in that room had faced the experience of being attacked—verbally, through threats to our employment and sometimes physically—for naming perpetrators or supporting others who did.

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BRANDON MCDADE ACCUSED OF LEWD ACTS WITH TEENS AS CHURCH YOUTH PASTOR

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Weekly

BY MATT COKER
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 2015

For the second time in two months, a youth pastor has been arrested for alleged sex crimes against teen victims on and off property of a South County Christian church.

Brandon McDade, 30, of Mission Viejo, was arrested Wednesday by Orange County Sheriff’s Department’s Special Victims Unit (SVU) investigators who’d been made aware of allegations of misconduct with children two days before, according to spokesman Lt. Jeff Hallock.

The case against McDade began Monday, when patrol deputies took a report from an alleged victim of the youth pastor at Grace Hills Church in Aliso Viejo, where the suspect has worked for about six years.

“During the course of the investigation, several other victims were contacted, each indicating they had engaged in inappropriate conduct with McDade over a two-year period while he was employed as the youth pastor at Grace Hills Church,” Hallock says. “There have been several alleged incidents of lewd and inappropriate conduct, several of which have occurred on the church property.”

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Assignment Record– Rev. David F. West

MICHIGAN
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: David F. West was ordained for the Detroit archdiocese in 1963. He worked in a number of parishes, and as a seminary faculty member and campus minister. He spent 1976-77 in the Lansing diocese on staff at a University of MI, Ann Arbor, student chapel. He died in April 2004. In December 2015 the archdiocese announced that they had received a credible allegation that West sexually abused a male minor in the 1970s.

Born: December 23, 1938
Ordained: December 16, 1963
Died: April 23, 2004

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Spotlight Co-star Neal Huff: Why Didn’t the Church Treat Abusers as Criminals?

UNITED STATES
Parade

JERYL BRUNNER

The film Spotlight was nominated for three Golden Globe awards, including Best Motion Picture—Drama. The riveting film unveils the true story of the fiercely intrepid Spotlight team of Boston Globe reporters and editors who exposed a massive cover-up of child abuse by more than 245 Catholic clergy.

The film stars a dream team cast including Michael Keaton, Liev Schreiber, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, John Slattery, Brian d’Arcy James, Stanley Tucci, Billy Crudup and Neal Huff. Huff plays Phil Saviano, a key figure in the film who was abused by a priest when he was 11 and came forward to the Boston Globe.

Saviano founded the New England chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). He brought names of child molesting priests and evidence to the Boston Globe and was instrumental in helping the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team uncover the scandal.

Huff, who was a series regular on The Wire as Chief of Staff Michael Steintorf and is currently in the film Nasty Baby with Kristen Wiig, took time out of his busy schedule to answer our questions about Spotlight.

When you learned that you were going to play Phil Saviano in Spotlight, what went through your mind?

I have to meet this man.

Why?

One of the great privileges of working on this film was that I was playing a real person in this production. Co-screenwriters Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy (who also directed the film), were in close contact with him. Within days, I was up in Boston and Phil was walking me through his life. Phil’s story alone could fill a book.

What inspires you most about Phil?

He hung in there and didn’t give up. Though Phil is one of the most gentle people I have ever met, when you sit next to him and he’s talking about what’s important to him, there is a focus and life force that he just radiates. It’s almost intimidating. His strength of character is extraordinary.

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MO–Victims praise Supreme Court ruling in Scout abuse case

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Dec. 11, 2015

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

The Missouri Supreme Court may let a child sex abuse victim expose his predator in civil court even though the crimes happened years ago. We hope this brave victim succeeds.

[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]

Courts and lawmakers are increasingly realizing it’s unjust and dangerous to impose arbitrary, archaic, predator-friendly deadlines that prevent most child sex abuse victims from using civil cases to warn parents about pedophiles. We hope Missouri’s Supreme Court will join this growing, wise and compassionate trend.

It’s hard to screen out predators. It’s easy, however, to stop them after a few victims instead of after dozens of victims. We just have to make it less difficult for victims to expose those who commit or conceal child sex crimes in court. That will make an enormous contribution to the safety of kids. It will also deter employers and co-workers who may be tempted to ignore or hide known or suspected child sex crimes. This is a rare situation in which justice, prevention, healing and compassion can all be served by one step: cracking open courthouse doors so more crime victims can deter heinous crimes.

Shame on Gerard Noce & Boy Scout officials who claim that only individuals, not institutions, can be sued under Missouri law. That kind of disingenuous, self-serving hair-splitting is immoral. Time and time again, institutions and their top officials ignore, hid or enable child predators. To let them off the hook for such irresponsible and selfish wrongdoing would endanger more kids and embolden more employers to act callously and deceitfully in child sex cases.

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New York priest took church funds to buy S&M sex, lawsuit claims

NEW YORK
Christian Today

Ruth Gledhill CHRISTIAN TODAY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR 11 December 2015

A New York priest stole more than $1 million from two churches in order to pay for rough “S&M” sex with his boyfriend, according to a lawsuit.

The suit, filed by parishioners, alleges that Father Peter Miqueli broke New York Archdiocese rules on gifts and donations by taking the funds. Church members have created a petition and a Facebook page demanding Father Miqueli’s removal.

Father Miqueli, 53, serves as parish priest in the Bronx, New York. The lawsuit, filed at Manhattan Supreme Court, alleges he took the cash to pay for $1,000 bondage sessions with a man referred to as his “master”, Keith Crist.

The papers say: “This lawsuit seeks to finally put an end to this truly sinful conduct so that St Frances de Chantal parish can regain the strength, spirituality and faith it once had before Father Miqueli arrived.”

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Priest Accused Of Stealing Over $1 Million From Churches To Finance S&M Relationship

NEW YORK
Gothamist

BY BEN YAKAS IN NEWS ON DEC 11, 2015

A Bronx priest has been accused of stealing over $1 million from two churches he worked at in order to pay for his S&M lifestyle with his boyfriend. “This lawsuit seeks to finally put an end to this truly sinful conduct so that St. Frances de Chantal parish can regain the strength, spirituality and faith it once had before Father Miqueli arrived,” the suit states.

Rev. Peter Miqueli has been accused by a group of angry parishioners of siphoning off over $1 million since 2003 while leading St. Frances Xavier Cabrini on Roosevelt Island and St. Frances de Chantal in The Bronx, where he is currently working. The lawsuit claims that Miqueli skimmed from collection plates, took money that had been donated to fix a church pipe organ, misappropriated funds from a church thrift shop, and more.

As for what the money was being used for: the lawsuit alleges that Miqueli paid $1,000 per rough sex session with his boyfriend Keith Crist, who was named as a co-defendant in the suit. The Post has more of the details:

Their suit alleges he used the money to act out unholy fantasies as a sexual “slave,” blowing $1,000 at a time on bondage-and-discipline sessions where a “homosexual sex ‘master’ ” — identified in court papers as Keith Crist — “would force Father Miqueli to drink Keith Crist’s urine.”

Miqueli also spent $60,000 in 2012 alone for “illicit and prescription drugs” he used with Crist, bought a $264,000 home in Brick, NJ, and paid $1,075.50 a month for his master’s East Harlem apartment, court papers say.

Plaintiffs’ lawyer Michael G. Dowd also said that Miqueli at one point had Crist living in the rectory at St. Frances de Chantal but that Crist had since been kicked out.

The suit also states that Miqueli used the money toward vacations in Italy and Florida. All these personal details about the men’s relationship were exposed after Crist’s ex-girlfriend, Tatyana Gudin, sent copies of tons of text and email messages between the lovers to church officials. The lawsuit states that Gudin sent Cardinal Timothy Dolan and other archdiocesan officials numerous emails about their behavior and Miqueli’s “illegal scheme,” and did nothing to keep it from growing into “the monster it is today.”

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Priest named in sex-slave prostitute suit

NEW YORK/NEW JERSEY
Ashbury Park Press

Karen Yi and Erik Larsen, @Erik_Larsen December 11, 2015

BRICK – A New York City Catholic priest is accused of embezzling nearly $1 million in church donations to pay a male prostitute and buy a $264,000 home here for the two of them to live in, according to a lawsuit filed by parishioners.

The complaint, filed Thursday in the Supreme Court of New York, alleges the Rev. Peter Miqueli funneled church money for his personal use which included paying a prostitute $1,000 a session to act out his “sexual fantasies.” The prostitute, identified as Keith Crist in court papers, engaged in a bondage-sadism-masochism relationship in which he role-played as the “sexual master” and made Miqueli the “slave,” the complaint states.

Miqueli, a pastor at St. Frances De Chantal parish, could not be reached for comment.

The lawsuit also names the Archdioceses of New York, Cardinal Timothy Dolan and Crist, and seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages. The Archdiocese did not return a request for comment. Crist could not be located for comment.

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New York Priest Stole $1M Church Lady Donations For His Gay S&M Master, As One Does

NEW YORK
Wonkette

By Evan Hurst – December 11, 2015

Every Sunday around the great US and A, churches pass the collection plates, so they can use the money to buy food and clothes for poor kids, and send Bibles to China, and so their priests can have “drug-fueled sex romps” in the dungeon with Keith. Because Catholic priests need somebody to help them wind down after a hard day of priesting, and it helps if that somebody is named Keith, has big muscles, and forces everybody to drink his pee:

A Catholic priest swiped collection-plate donations to pay for drug-fueled sex romps with a heavily muscled S&M “master,” a new lawsuit charges.

Parishioners claim the Rev. Peter Miqueli has stolen at least $1 million since 2003 […]

Their suit alleges he used the money to act out unholy fantasies as a sexual “slave,” blowing $1,000 at a time on bondage-and-discipline sessions where a “homosexual sex ‘master’ ” — identified in court papers as Keith Crist — “would force Father Miqueli to drink Keith Crist’s urine.”

That’s SO Keith. But it’s even better than that, because the suit says Miqueli used the money to pay $1075.50 per month for a little place in the city, and $264,000 in cash for a little place in New Jersey, and Keith lived at both of those places, and all he had to do was pee all over Rev. Miqueli’s face on a regular basis.

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Bronx priest skips Mass services after accusations of stealing $1M from parishes to use on S&M romance with boyfriend

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY CHELSIA ROSE MARCIUS, BARBARA ROSS, NANCY DILLON December 11, 2015

Where art thou, Rev. Peter Miqueli?

The Bronx priest accused of looting more than $1 million from two city parishes and using the cash on a wild S&M romance with a beefy boy toy was missing from services at St. Frances De Chantal church in Throggs Neck on Friday.

Fr. Stephen Asomah led a morning mass and didn’t mention the scandal-plagued priest.

“It is not fair. No comment,” Asomah said when asked about Miqueli after the service.

At least one parishioner said it was “common knowledge” that Miqueli was facing accusations he fleeced his flock.

“He’s a troubled man, not a good man,” Janeen Ruzzi, 45, told the Daily News.

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Diocesan priest concludes administrative leave, granted retirement

CLEVELAND (OH)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Cleveland

October 22, 2015

In response to allegations that the Reverend Joseph J. Seminatore was culpable of grave offenses against the sixth commandment of the Decalogue with minors (cf. CIC canon 1395, §2, Sacramentorum sanctitatis tutela, article 4, n.1), a tribunal of three priest canonists, constituted by Most Reverend Richard G. Lennon at the direction of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, found the charges not confirmed. An appeal of the decision by the Promoter of Justice was not accepted by the Holy See; thus, the decision stands.

Recognizing the dignity of the priesthood, which was established by Jesus Christ to be joined in a special way with the episcopal ministry, and thus shares in the authority by which Christ builds up, sanctifies, and rules his Church, it is all the more necessary to exercise invariant vigilance over the behavior of priests and to hold them to a greater level of accountability. Acknowledging the grave responsibility of the Bishop for vigilance in all ministerial activities, especially those involving minors, and for the good of the Church, while also recognizing limitations caused by advanced age and health issues, Father Seminatore has consented to a limited set of ministerial parameters.

Father Seminatore, formerly Chaplain at the now-closed Parmadale Residential Center for Youth, was placed on administrative leave by the Diocese of Cleveland in May of 2002.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 11 December 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has:

– accepted the resignation from the office of auxiliary of the diocese of San Bernardino, U.S.A., presented by Bishop Rutilio Juan Del Riego Janez upon reaching the age limit.

– appointed Msgr. Rolf Steinhauser as auxiliary of the archdiocese of Cologne, (area 6,181, population 5,400,000, Catholics 2,056,173, priests 1,095, permanent deacons 310, religious 1,841), Germany. The bishop-elect was born in Cologne, Germany in 1952 and was ordained a priest in 1977. He has served in a number of pastoral roles, including head of youth pastoral ministry in Bonn, director of the office for youth pastoral ministry of the archdiocesan curia of Cologne, parish priest and dean of the city of Dusseldorf. He is currently resident canon of the Metropolitan chapter of Cologne and director of the Edith Stein House for Spiritual Exercises.

– given his assent to the decision of the Synod of Bishops of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church to erect the eparchy of Kamyanets-Podilskyi of the Ukrainians at Khmelnitskyi with territory taken from the archieparchy of Ternopil-Zboriv, making it a suffragan of the same metropolitan Church.

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SNAP Update: Let’s Shout Out Our Gratitude to ALL the Reporters Who Exposed Clergy Sex Crimes

UNITED STATES
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

Dec 08, 2015 | Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

SNAP Update: Let’s Shout Out Our Gratitude to ALL the Reporters Who Exposed Clergy Sex Crimes

Listen to these quotes from news reports. (The words won’t surprise you. But the timing may.)

— “A three month investigation reveals that in more than 25 dioceses across the US, church officials have failed to notify authorities, transferred molesting priests to other parishes, ignored parental complains and disregarded the potential damage to children who are the victims.”

— “At a time of heightened national awareness of the problems of child abuse, the Catholic Church in the US continues to ignore and cover up cases of priests who sexually molest children. . . .”

— “Catholic officials and their attorneys have sought court records, have attacked newspapers and have impugned the motives and even the sanity of those who have brought complaints against priests.”

— “Hundreds of children molested by Catholic priests in the US during the last five years have suffered severe emotional trauma. . . ”

These lines all appeared in a mainstream daily newspaper – the San Jose Mercury News — and subsequently in other newspapers – in the year. . . .1987. That’s right: almost 29 years ago.

The journalist who did the digging (and won several journalism awards for his painstaking work) was Carl Cannon.

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An unholy alliance: When mob forgiveness meets selective grace

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service – Rhymes with Religion

Boz Tchividjian | Dec 11, 2015

Last February, I had the distinct privilege to interview Jonathan Hollingsworth and his mom, Amy Hollingsworth about Runaway Radical and the darker sides to being “radical for Jesus”. However, it was not until just a couple of months ago that my wife and I were finally able to finally meet these two heroes in person and share a wonderful meal together. I hope it will be the first meals of many! Jonathan returns this week as a guest writer to share about the dangers of mob forgiveness that finds redemption stories where they don’t exist, while at the same time affirming perpetrators and re-traumatizing victims.

I am grateful for the life and voice of my friend, Jonathan Hollingsworth. – Boz
______________________________

A small town in Missouri recently came under fire for rallying around an accused child sex offender and shunning the abuse victim—even after the offender pleaded guilty in court.

“If it takes a village to raise a child,” said a local prosecuting attorney, “what is a child to do when the village turns its back and supports a confessed child molester?”

The townspeople, who were described as deeply religious, insisted that the sex offender was a “good man” who had already suffered enough and that “only God knows” what really happened.

It’s a familiar ritual, one that’s performed everywhere from small towns in Missouri to megachurches, a subtle form of mob justice where the primary weapons are not pitchforks and torches but mercy and forgiveness. Whenever a beloved Christian figure gets caught in a sexual abuse scandal, it’s not long before the Christian mob comes rushing to his defense.

On the surface, this redemption-over-retribution approach might seem well within the Christian mandate to love one’s enemies and forgive one’s transgressors. However, there’s a fine line between offering a perpetrator grace and denying a victim justice, and it’s a line that Christian culture crosses all too often.

Minimizing wrongs

Mob forgiveness follows a progression. First, the perpetrator’s supporters (family, friends, colleagues, and the like) come out of the woodwork to defend him. Here, the mob doesn’t deny that the perpetrator did anything wrong. Rather, the mob reframes what the perpetrator did in a way that makes it seem less wrong.

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NJ a safe haven for sexual predators until legislation passes | Opinion

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By MAI FERNANDEZ

The critically acclaimed movie “Spotlight,” currently in theaters, is a compelling real life look at the cover up of heinous acts by priests against children in Massachusetts that was unearthed by the Boston Globe. It is a powerful story about the active efforts to hide the truth as well as the harm done to innocent victims. It is time that the spotlight be put on New Jersey.

New Jersey is no exception to these horrors and, what is worse, it does little to protect the victims. In fact, the state is ranked in the bottom half of the country in safeguarding children from sexual abuse and letting molesters off the hook, according to an analysis of all 50 states by SOL-Reform.com.

According to data from the Crimes Against Children Research Center, one in five girls and one in 20 boys are sexually abused before the age of 18. In more than half those cases, a trusted person, such as a family member, a coach or a scoutmaster, abused the child. Despite the prevalence, up to 90 percent of the cases are never reported.

We must do better to protect our most innocent of victims. Yet the State Senate refuses to act on bipartisan legislation introduced by Senator Joe Vitale, a Middlesex County Democrat, who is trying to bring decency and good sense to our state.

Institutions that enable sexual predators have been lobbying tenaciously to prevent the bill’s passage as they successfully did in 2012. They seek to avoid responsibility for failing to protect the children placed in their care. How is it that a bill intended to serve such vulnerable and innocent victims is so obviously being stalled?

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Victim warned of ‘fight’ against church

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

Dec. 10, 2015

VICTIM David Ridsdale says seeking legal redress against the Diocese of Ballarat for abuse he suffered at the hands of his uncle was like being molested all over again.

“It was extremely traumatic, that was my experience,” Mr Ridsdale said. “It was just as traumatic in some ways and the trauma continues for me.”

Catholic Church Authorities attempted to pressure Mr Ridsdale’s parents to drop the charges against notorious paedophile Gerald Ridsdale, the child sex abuse inquiry heard.

A transcript of the minutes of a Catholic Church Insurances body meeting tendered to the inquiry, revealed Monsignor Glynn Murphy warned Mr Ridsdale’s parents they could “expect a fight” if they pursued legal action against the disgraced priest.

Mr Ridsdale said while it was vindicating to have public acknowledgement of the way victims were treated, it was also “extremely disturbing” to have his fears confirmed.

“They (Catholic Church authorities) were in cahoots,” he said. “This is stuff that we’ve believed and talked about for years.Having it confirmed is both great and also extremely disturbing.”

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Pell must give evidence in Australia

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

Cardinal George Pell’s appearance at the child abuse royal commission has been deferred, but he’s been told he must still come to Australia to give evidence in person.

The commission has rejected a bid by Cardinal Pell to give his evidence via videolink from Rome after his lawyers argued it would unsafe for him to travel to Australia due to serious health issues.

Cardinal Pell was to appear before the inquiry in Melbourne from Wednesday to give evidence about clergy abuse in the Melbourne archdiocese and the Ballarat diocese.

Commission chair Justice Peter McClellan said Cardinal Pell will now have to give evidence in Ballarat in February. ‘In the hope that the cardinal’s health will improve, rather than take video evidence this week, we will defer his evidence to the Ballarat sitting in both the Ballarat and Melbourne case studies,’ Justice McClellan said.

‘If the cardinal’s health has not sufficiently improved by then to enable him to travel, we will further consider the position, which may include further delaying his evidence to a date when he can travel safely to Australia.’

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Vatileaks may take 2 mths to resume

VATICAN CITY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Vatican City, December 11 – The Vatileaks 2 trial may take up to two months to resume, Vatican Spokesman Father Federico Lombardi said Friday.

“A delay of two months is plausible” given the time needed to prepare various expert testimony, he said.

Earlier this week a Holy See court ruled that Vatican Secretary of State Pietro Parolin should be called as a witness.

The court granted a request by the defence team of one of the five accused, Francesca Chaouqui, to call as witnesses Parolin and Santos Abril y Castello’, the president of the Commission of Cardinals of the Vatican bank, IOR.

The court rejected a petition by Chaouqui’s lawyers challenging the Vatican’s jurisdiction over the case on the grounds that the alleged crimes took place in Italy.

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Victims left reeling from shock Pell decision

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Melissa Cunningham
Dec. 11, 2015

CLERGY sex abuse survivors have been left reeling by news Cardinal George Pell will not be appearing at the child sex abuse inquiry next week. Victim and nephew of disgraced priest Gerard Ridsdale said the lives of survivors had been thrown into turmoil again.

He called for Cardinal Pell to “come and face the music” like the survivors have been forced to do for years.

Cardinal Pell is unable to make his anticipated appearance at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse next week due to ill health, his lawyer has said.

Cardinal Pell’s counsel, Allan Myers QC, told the hearing on Friday that Cardinal Pell, who is based in Rome, had “serious health conditions” and would be unable to fly to Australia to appear at the inquiry on Wednesday.

Earlier this week, at the request of Cardinal Pell, Mr Ridsdale and fellow survivor Timothy Green were cross-examined for allegations they had made about the senior Vatican.

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New York priest accused of looting parish funds to fuel drug-crazed sex parties with gay prostitute

NEW YORK
Church Militant

by Bradley Eli, M.Div., MA.Th.

(Reader discretion advised) BRONX (ChurchMilitant.com) – Parishioners in the archdiocese of New York have filed a lawsuit against a priest accusing him of embezzling more than $1,000,000 from two parishes since 2003. Further charges are that the money was used in part to fund his drug-laced sex parties with a homosexual prostitute. The lawsuit alleges these crimes were perpetrated with the full knowledge of the archdiocese and Cdl. Timothy Dolan.

For the last several months, ChurchMilitant.com has been investigating the allegations against Fr. Peter Miqueli, pastor of St. Frances de Chantal in Throgs Neck, New York.

A September report by ChurchMilitant.com describes allegations against Fr. Miqueli that he has been ransacking parish funds for nearly a decade to the tune of approximately $1,000,000.

Almost two years ago parishioners started a website and Facebook page to document Fr. Miqueli’s radical behavior.

Another ChurchMilitant.com report filed last week raised the question as to how the archdiocese is still allowing this priest to continue in his ministry with these allegations.

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Bronx Catholic priest ‘stole $1M from two city parishes to pay for drugs, hot tub and rough sex with muscle-bound escort lover’ according to explosive lawsuit

NEW YORK
Daily Mail (UK)

By ALEXANDRA KLAUSNER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

A Catholic priest is accused of stealing over $1 million in donations for years of dirty sex with a muscled homosexual S&M master.

Rev. Peter Miqueli, 53, who is currently a pastor at St. Frances de Chantal in Throggs Neck is accused of taking from the donation plate at leading churches on Roosevelt Island and in The Bronx where he led the congregations.

A lawsuit filed on Thursday in the Manhattan Supreme Court by furious parishoners claims that Miqueli would spend $1,000 at a time for bondage sessions with a ‘homosexual sex master’ named Keith Crist.

The lawsuit also claims that the Archdiocese of New York and Timothy Cardinal Dolan knew about Miqueli’s ‘illegal scheme’ and did nothing to stop it.

‘This lawsuit seeks to finally put an end to this truly sinful conduct so that St. Frances de Chantal parish can regain the strength, spirituality and faith it once had before Father Miqueli arrived,’ court papers say.

The New York Post reports that during sex sessions, Miqeuli was forced to drink Crist’s urine. Miqeuli and his ‘lover’ shared a home in Brick, New Jersey after Miqueli paid $264,000 six years ago. Miqueli also $1,075.50 a month for Crist’s East Harlem apartment.

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Abuse victims seeking ‘easy cash’: bishop

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

AAP

A Catholic bishop now says he was rash when he told a pedophile priest some child sex abuse victims were trying to get “some easy cash”.

The child abuse royal commission has heard Bishop Brian Finnigan, then Ballarat diocese vicar-general, told convicted pedophile Gerald Francis Ridsdale in 1994: “Some of these fellows now see the opportunity to obtain some easy cash.”

Bishop Finningan, now a Brisbane auxiliary bishop, said it was a rash statement and not his view of child sex abuse victims who sought damages from the church.

“It’s a rash statement not given much thought to at the time when it was written,” Bishop Finnigan told the commission.

Bishop Finnigan said he could not remember details of a number of meetings where the movement of priests was discussed, from 1979 to 1998 when he was bishop’s secretary, a member of the College of Consultors and then vicar-general.

Challenged about his lack of memory of important issues about priests offending against children by counsel assisting the commission Angus Stewart SC, Bishop Finnigan said he did not recall them.

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Beyond silence: Confronting child sexual abuse in Jewish community

CALIFORNIA
JWeekly

by drew himmelstein, j. staff

A few years ago, Congregation Beth Jacob faced a situation without precedent in the Redwood City synagogue: a teenage student working as an aide in a religious school classroom was accused of inappropriately touching two young girls.

“My community was rocked,” said Rabbi Nathaniel Ezray. “I’m sometimes amazed about how we’re ill-prepared for things we need to be prepared for.”

The experience provided a quick education for the congregation, which reported the situation to authorities and consulted with an outside expert for guidance in handling it. The synagogue now has explicit guidelines for those who work with children. Still, several years later, the pain hasn’t gone away.

“I think that trauma takes a long time to resolve,” Ezray said. “I think people think it was dealt with thoughtfully.”

Handling the delicate, troubling and painful issue of child sexual abuse is challenging for any synagogue, where staff members typically are not experts on such matters. Clergy and administrators may suddenly find themselves in the unexpected position of making reports to legal authorities, counseling the families of victims, protecting the rights and privacy of the accused and rethinking safety and hiring policies.

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Ex-Catholic brother jailed for boys’ abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

A former Catholic brother who smiled after abusing boys at a Victorian college more than 30 years ago has been jailed.

Edward Mamo, 71, was working as a groundskeeper, bus driver and sports coach when he abused 14 teenagers in the laundry room of Monivae College at Hamilton in the 1970s and 1980s.

He used a strap or cane to whip some over their bare buttocks and grabbed the genitals of others.

Mamo will spend 12 months behind bars after being handed a jail sentence of 34 months, suspended for 22 months, in the County Court of Victoria on Friday.

The court heard Mamo would punish boys for smoking cigarettes, even though he wasn’t authorised to carry out corporal punishment.

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Cardinal George Pell will not appear next week in Melbourne

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

11 December, 2015

Cardinal Pell will not be giving evidence in Melbourne next week.

Cardinal Pell’s legal representative AJ Myers QC made an application for Cardinal Pell to give evidence by video link at his scheduled appearance on Wednesday 16 December 2015. The basis of this application was the Cardinal’s current state of health.

Justice McClellan refused this application, preferring the Cardinal to give his evidence in person.

Justice McClellan noted that Cardinal Pell had previously agreed to give evidence in person.

The Judge further noted that the Cardinal’s evidence relates to two case studies which involve a significant amount of complex material. The Judge also referred to technical difficulties experienced when the Cardinal gave evidence by video link from Rome on a previous occasion.

It is expected that Cardinal Pell will be asked to give evidence in person when the Royal Commission sits in Ballarat in February 2016.

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Retired priest granted day parole

CANADA
The Westrn Star

Diane Crocker
Published on December 11, 2015

In a decision released Thursday, a two-panel board voted Tuesday to allow Smith, 77, to be released to a community-residential facility upon bed space availability for a period of six months.

Smith was sentenced by the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador in Corner Brook in March 2013 to nine years, 11 months and 10 days in prison for 38 charges — 23 counts of indecent assault against a male, seven counts of sexual assault and eight counts of assault with intent.

The offences happened when Smith was a parish priest in several western Newfoundland communities and during trips to the mainland between 1969 and 1989.

In its decision, the board spoke of the assaults as being intrusive in nature and said Smith breached his position of trust and authority as a member of the clergy. During many of the assaults Smith was under the influence of alcohol and provided alcohol to his underage victims, the board said. It said the assaults were planned and included using bribes, manipulation and threats to gain his victims’ compliance.

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OC Youth Pastor Arrested On Suspicion Of Engaging In Inappropriate Conduct With Children

CALIFORNIA
CBS Los Angeles

ALISO VIEJO (CBSLA.com) — A 30-year-old youth pastor suspected of engaging in inappropriate conduct with children at an Aliso Viejo church has been arrested, deputies said Thursday.

On Wednesday, Brandon McDade, of Mission Viejo, was taken into custody on suspicion of committing lewd and lascivious acts with a child and child annoyance, according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.

McDade is being held on $20,000 at the Orange County Jail. He is expected to appear in court on Friday.

The investigation began earlier this week when sheriff’s investigators were contacted after patrol deputies took report of allegations against McDade at Grace Hills Church, located in Aliso Viejo.

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Aliso Viejo youth pastor arrested on suspicion of inappropriate conduct with teen boys

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Register

ALISO VIEJO – A youth pastor at an Aliso Viejo church was arrested Wednesday on suspicion of engaging in inappropriate conduct with multiple teen boys, according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department.

Brandon McDade, 30, Mission Viejo, has been booked into the Orange County Jail on suspicion of lewd and lascivious acts with a child and child annoyance.

He is being held on $20,000 bail and is scheduled to appear in Orange County Superior Court on Friday.

Sheriff’s investigators were contacted Monday after deputies received a report of allegations against McDade while he worked as the youth pastor at Grace Hills Church, Lt. Jeff Hallock said.

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Another South County Youth Pastor Accused of Molesting Teen Congregants

CALIFORNIA
Patch

By PAIGE AUSTIN (Patch Staff)
December 10, 2015

A youth pastor at an Aliso Viejo church was behind bars today for allegedly having “inappropriate” contact with children, sometimes on church property.

Brandon McDade, 30, of Mission Viejo, was arrested Wednesday and is being held in lieu of $20,000 bail, according to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department. It the second time in a month that a South County youth pastor has been arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting congregants.

Sheriff’s officials said they began investigating McDade Monday after receiving a report of inappropriate conduct. While investigating, detectives contacted several other alleged victims, each of whom indicated there had been inappropriate conduct by McDade over a two-year period when he worked as a youth pastor at Grace Hills Church, according to the sheriff’s department.

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Royal commission finds Marist failed to remove paedophile Brother John Chute

AUSTRALIA
The Canberra Times

December 11, 2015

Christopher Knaus
Reporter for The Canberra Times.

Marist ignored allegations that a now notorious paedophile teacher was sexually abusing students, instead shuffling him between schools, in one case even promoting him to principal, and failing to refer complaints to police, the royal commission has found.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse delivered its formal findings on the cases of Brother John Chute, also known as Brother Kostka, and another Marist brother, Gregory Sutton, on Friday.

The pair abused students for decades at a string of schools across Australia, including many at Marist College Canberra.

When allegations child molestation surfaced, they were handled woefully, with the brothers simply moved between schools, given warnings, or placed under “supervision”.
The failings allowed the pair to continue to access and abuse vulnerable children, the royal commission found.

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El Salvador lawmakers seek to end impunity in church sex abuse

EL SALVADOR
Channel News Asia

Posted 11 Dec 2015

SAN SALVADOR: El Salvador’s Congress on Thursday passed legislation to remove the statute of limitations on sex crimes against minors as the country’s church faces a growing number of abuse cases.

The bill said that “serious crimes” of sexual abuse of children and teenagers have gone unpunished due to the statute of limitations.

In November, the church fired a senior priest and former secretary of murdered Archbishop Oscar Romero after allegations that the priest had sex with a minor. Another priest has also been accused.

According to victims, the crimes took place decades ago and authorities could not investigate the accused priests.

Jose Escobar, archbishop of San Salvador’s Catholic Church, on Sunday asked lawmakers to remove the statute of limitations and he assured that the church would not cover up cases of abuse. He also denied an accusation that he tried to bribe a woman who was sexually abused by a priest to keep her quiet.

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Cleveland minister who sexually abused girls sentenced to life in prison

OHIO
WKYC

CLEVELAND — A Cleveland minister who sexually abused young girls in his congregation will spend the rest of his life in prison.

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy McGinty made the announcement Thursday.

A jury convicted 52-year-old Ubaldo Ocasio on one count of rape, six counts of gross sexual imposition, six counts of kidnapping, two counts of sexual battery, and four counts of endangering children.

Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold sentenced Ocasio to life in prison with first eligibility for parole in 128 years.

Ocasio will also be required to register as a Tier III sexual offender for the rest of his life.

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Cleveland pastor Ubaldo Ocasio, Jr. sentenced to life in prison for sexually abusing young girls

OHIO
newsnet 5

CLEVELAND – Ubaldo Ocasio, Jr., a Cleveland minister who sexually abused young girls in his congregation, has been sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison, according to Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty.

On Thursday, Ocasio was convicted by a jury on one count of rape, six counts of gross sexual imposition, six counts of kidnapping, two counts of sexual battery, and four counts of endangering children.

After the jury found that Ocasio was a sexually violent predator, he was sentenced to life in prison by Cuyahoga County Common Please Court Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold. Ocasio will be eligible for parole after 128 years.

He will be required to register as a Tier III sexual offender for the rest of his life.

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Cardinal George Pell backs out of giving evidence at Royal Commission into clergy abuse

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Catholic Cardinal George Pell has deferred giving evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, despite being due to arrive in Melbourne on Sunday.

Cardinal Pell had requested to give evidence via videolink from Rome, with his lawyers arguing it was unsafe for him to travel to Australia due to health issues.

He was due to arrive in Melbourne on Sunday, and appear before the inquiry from Wednesday to give evidence about clergy abuse in the Melbourne archdiocese and the Ballarat diocese.

A statement was released this afternoon from the office of Cardinal Pell in Rome.

“The Cardinal had booked his travel back to Melbourne and until the middle of this week was determined to return to give evidence in person,” the statement read.

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Vatican treasurer delays evidence to Australia child abuse inquiry, cites illness

AUSTRALIA
Chronicle Daily

by Benjamin Gardner on 11/12/2015

The judge chairing the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse denied the request and said he wanted Pell, the Vatican’s prefect of the secretariat for the economy, to testify in person.

Cardinal Pell’s lawyer, Allan Meyers, QC, asked the commission on Friday to allow his client to testify via video link from Rome, where he is now head of the Vatican’s finances, citing ill health. The medical certificates detailing Cardinal Pell’s condition – which were partly in Italian – were suppressed.

‘Cardinal Pell deeply regrets this and has been preparing himself for this journey for some time but the circumstances in which he finds himself are the circumstances that exist now.

Justice McClennan said that while Cardinal Pell had previously given evidence from Rome, it was not appropriate this time as the issues before the commission were complex and involve two case studies covering an extensive period of time. Chronicle Daily

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Pell’s application to appear at Royal Commission via video link denied

AUSTRALIA
ABC – PM

TIM PALMER: The child sex abuse Royal Commission which has denied a request from Cardinal George Pell to give his much anticipated evidence via video link from Rome rather than in person next week.

Lawyers for the Cardinal made the bombshell application at the hearing today, on the grounds of the Cardinal’s ill health.

That prompted laughter from abuse survivors and their supporters in the hearing room.

They’ve welcomed the commission’s insistence George Pell appear in person.

Samantha Donovan reports.

SAMANTHA DONOVAN: Cardinal George Pell had been due to appear before the royal commission in Melbourne next week.

He was expected to be in the witness box for about three days.

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Christian cult leader and psychotherapist, 63, who told her clients to breastfeed from her and suckle ‘mummy’s milk’ is jailed for series of bizarre sexual assaults on women

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By STEPH COCKROFT FOR MAILONLINE

A Christian cult leader and psychotherapist who breastfed her clients by telling them to suckle ‘mummy’s milk’ has been jailed for a series of bizarre sexual assaults on women.

Vanessa Clark, 63, manipulated her clients into paying thousands of pounds for ‘skin to skin’ contact – including breastfeeding – which she claimed had been approved by a priest to heal depression.

The court heard Clark massaged one victim until she became aroused before telling her this was her ‘inner baby’ coming out.

Another vulnerable client, who began shaking as she spoke about her childhood, was asked by Clark: ‘Does baby want some milk?’

Clark has now been jailed for four years after ‘wholly abusing’ her position of trust as a psychotherapist.

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A Hollywood reminder of tough – and scarce – journalism

UNITED STATES
The Globe and Mail (Canada)

GARY MASON
The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015

There’s a scene in the movie Spotlight in which a reporter played by actor Mark Ruffalo is arguing with his editor about why their newspaper, The Boston Globe, should publish the explosive story they’ve been working on rather than hold it for further corroboration.

“This is not just Boston,” says Mr. Ruffalo, referring to the vast tentacles of sexual abuse the paper has uncovered. “This is the whole country, the whole world. They [the Catholic Church] knew and they let it happen. It could’ve been you, it could have been me. It could have been any of us.”

It’s one of many moments in the film that gave me shivers. If you haven’t seen Spotlight, you should. It’s the true story of The Boston Globe’s groundbreaking probe of child abuse by priests in the Boston Catholic church. The reporting was carried out by the paper’s investigation unit called Spotlight and earned The Boston Globe a Pulitzer Prize in 2003. The exposé did nothing less than blow the lid off the far-reaching network of sexual abuse that had been going on in the church for decades. The stories also revealed the institutional corruption that existed in the church hierarchy that allowed it all to happen.

I consider myself as lucky as Michael Rezendes, the Catholic and Boston-raised Globe reporter whom Mr. Ruffalo depicts in movie. I, too, grew up Catholic and regarded the priest I assisted each morning as an altar boy akin to God. I eventually grew out of my devotion to black robes and morning mass and escaped from that period of my life relatively unscathed. Others weren’t so fortunate. One of the priests I regularly served mass with was a pedophile. He would be convicted on three counts of gross indecency involving minors but likely hurt far, far more children than that.

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Bishop hid child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Herald

By Melissa Cunningham
Dec. 11, 2015

FORMER Ballarat Bishop secretary Monsignor Glynn Murphy says despite having knowledge of mounting allegations of sexual abuse against children he never went to police.

Australian army chaplain Monsignor Murphy dealt with sexual abuse allegations from 1993 to 1997 as the special issues committee convenor. He told the inquiry he “implicitly” trusted Bishop Ronald Mulkearns to pass complaints onto police.

“Did I have faith and trust that the Bishop would follow through with information I gave him, yes I did,” he said. “There was no indication to me that he was not passing on any material that he should pass on.”

The inquiry also heard there was a Ballarat policeman on the church committee but no abuse claims were reported to authorties.

The culture of secrecy and concealment of child sex crimes was further exposed at the inquiry with Monsignor Murphy admitting Bishop Mulkearns kept locked files on priests and did not disclose information to other clergy.

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Movie stirs conflict for journalist, mom of priest

UNITED STATES
San Diego Union-Tribune

By Kristin Gilger Dec. 10, 2015

If your son is a priest and your daughter a journalist, “Spotlight” is a jarring movie.

There are journalists and lawyers aplenty in this recently released movie about The Boston Globe’s investigation of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, but hardly any priests.

I went to see “Spotlight” to cheer for the journalists. I’m a longtime journalist and journalism professor who raised a daughter who is an investigative reporter. But I’m also the mother of a Catholic priest. And that made “Spotlight” very difficult to watch indeed.

My son Patrick joined the Jesuit order of Catholic priests nearly 12 years ago, a decision that startled us then and still has the power to unsettle us now.

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Diocese of Moncton suing Co-Operators Insurance for $4.2M

CANADA
CBC News

By Jennifer Choi, CBC News
Posted: Dec 10, 2015

The Diocese of Moncton has filed a civil lawsuit against Co-Operators General Insurance to recoup $4.2 million dollars it paid out to victims of sexual abuse.

This case comes on the heels of another civil lawsuit in which the Diocese of Bathurst is seeking $3.3 million from Aviva Insurance.

Judge Stephen McNally is the presiding judge in both cases. The arguments in both cases are similar.

Both dioceses participated in a confidential compensation process run by Michel Bastarache. The former Supreme Court justice interviewed approximately two-hundred victims and awarded them compensation based on the age of the victim when assaulted, the severity of abuse and the frequency of abuse.

Court documents obtained by CBC revealed that the Diocese of Moncton has paid a total of $10.6 million to victims of abuse through the Bastarache process.

The diocese claims that $4.2 million dollars of that total falls within the time period in which the church had an insurance policy with the Co-operators.

That policy dates from 1977 to 1999.

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Commission challenges bishop’s claims he was unaware of priest’s child abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey

Thursday 10 December 2015

The chair of a royal commission has rigorously challenged claims by the auxiliary bishop of Brisbane, Brian Finnegan, that he was not aware that a now notorious paedophile priest he had oversight of was suspected of abusing children.

Finnegan was secretary to the bishop of the Ballarat diocese, Ronald Mulkearns, between 1979 and 1985, a period during which Gerald Ridsdale was abusing children in his role as a priest at parishes within the diocese.

Finnegan repeatedly told the commission he had no idea of concerns about Ridsdale abusing children while working for the diocese, despite receiving a telephone call from a mother who told him she was concerned for the safety of her eldest son following his interactions with Ridsdale at a presbytery.

During the phone call, the mother told Finnegan she wanted a private meeting with Mulkearns to discuss her concerns. According to notes of that conversation tendered to the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, Finnegan told the mother there was no need for concern, and there had been no reports of improper behaviour by Ridsdale.

Finnegan also did not help the mother to make an appointment with Mulkearns, and told the commission he doubted he would have informed Mulkearns of the conversation. He also said he did not take the complaint to mean there were concerns about Ridsdale abusing the boy.

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Child Abuse Royal Commission: Current Bishop of Brisbane Brian Finnigan ‘ignored’ complaints about paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Guy Stayner

The current Bishop of Brisbane ignored complaints about notorious paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has heard.

Bishop Brian Finnigan was the secretary to the Bishop of Ballarat in the 1980s.

In 1981, he took a phone call from concerned parents in Mortlake about Gerald Ridsdale.

Counsel Assisting Angus Steward read a statement from the parents.

“We said that the enquiry was related to the safety of our son,” he read.

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Cardinal Pell told to attend child abuse inquiry after video link request denied

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey

Thursday 10 December 2015

The chair of the royal commission into institutional responses to child sex abuse has refused to allow Cardinal George Pell to appear by video link, instead deferring the hearing until February to ensure Pell can appear in person.

A lawyer representing Pell, Allan Myers, made an application for Pell to give evidence next week via video link from Rome rather than appear in person, citing health reasons.

Myers told the commission chair, Justice Peter McClellan, that Pell “deeply regrets this and has been preparing himself for this duty for some time”.

McClellan refused the request, and said he would rather Pell appear in person. He said given there were two complex matters Pell was due to give evidence on, and after technical problems when Pell previously appeared before the commission via video link, he would defer Pell’s evidence until February, when the third part of hearings into abuse within the Catholic diocese of Ballarat are due to be heard.

Victims present in the court room applauded McClellan’s decision. A substantial crowd was expected next when Pell was due to appear, and extra provisions had been made for the media to cover it.

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George Pell withdraws from child abuse Royal Commission hearing due to ill health

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

December 11, 2015
Padraic Murphy
Herald Sun

CARDINAL George Pell has pulled out of giving evidence at the child abuse Royal Commission next week, claiming he is too sick to travel.

Cardinal Pell applied to give evidence by video link to Rome at next week’s hearing, but that request was rejected by the Commission.

Cardinal Pell’s solicitor said he was suffering high blood pressure and could not take long flights.

Cardinal Pell was meant to arrive on Sunday ahead of his planned appearance at the Commission next Wednesday.

“Cardinal Pell is currently affect by a very serious health condition that in the opinion of his treating specialist makes travel to Australia unsafe,” the solicitor said in a letter.

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Cardinal George Pell ‘too ill’ to travel from Rome to Melbourne for royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Age

December 11, 2015

Jane Lee
Legal affairs, health and science reporter

Cardinal George Pell’s testimony to a child abuse royal commission has been delayed until next year because he is too unwell to travel to Australia.

The cardinal was to appear in person at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Melbourne next week to give evidence on how he responded to child abuse allegations as a priest in Ballarat and as the Archbishop of Melbourne.

His lawyer, Allan Myers, QC, asked the commission on Friday to allow his client to testify via video link from Rome, where he manages the Vatican’s finances, citing ill health.

The personal details of the medical certificates detailing Cardinal Pell’s condition — which were partly in Italian — were suppressed but understood to include his blood pressure. Mr Myers said he did not wish to “waive confidentiality” of his health records.

Cardinal Pell’s office released a statement shortly after the hearing, saying he had suffered from a heart condition “for some time”, and that its symptoms had “recently worsened”. A specialist cardiologist in Rome advised “it is not safe for him to undertake long haul flights in his current condition”. He “reluctantly and only on medical advice” asked to appear via video and had only decided in the “middle of this week” not to come to Australia.

Mr Myers said that the 74-year-old cardinal had booked his flights and had been due to arrive in Australia on Sunday.

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December 10, 2015

Cleveland pastor guilty of sexually abusing children gets life in prison

OHIO
cleveland.com

By Cory Shaffer | cleveland.com
on December 10, 2015

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The former pastor of a small West Side church was sentenced Thursday to spend the rest of his life in prison after a jury found him guilty of sexually abusing young girls in his congregation.

Ubaldo Ocasio’s first chance at parole will be after 128 years in prison, in the year 2142.

Cuyahoga County Judge Shirley Strickland Saffold handed down the sentence after a jury found Ocasio, 52, guilty on one count of rape, six counts of gross sexual imposition, six counts of kidnapping, two counts of sexual battery and four counts of endangering children.

The jury also found Ocasio to be a sexually violent predator.

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Pastor accused of sex abuse released from jail

OREGON
Herald and News

By STEPHEN FLOYD H&N Staff Reporter

A local pastor accused of sexually abusing a congregation member has been released from jail, but remains barred from interacting with church members.

Larry Marshall Murrell, 63, was released Tuesday on his own recognizance while waiting trial on charges of second-degree sexual abuse and third-degree sexual abuse (two counts). As a condition of his release, Murrell is allowed no contact with the congregation or the victim, as requested by prosecutors.

Though a trial was scheduled for Wednesday, the court granted a continuance allowing Murrell’s attorney, privately retained Nathan Ratliff of Klamath Falls, more time to investigate and potentially reach a settlement with prosecutors.

A new trial date has not been scheduled and Murrell’s next court appearance is Feb. 2 before Judge Dan Bunch.

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Sexual Abuse Trial Set in January for Cowboy Church Pastor

NEBRASKA
KWBE

SIDNEY – A Jan. 12 trial date is scheduled for Roger Craig Kissel, 68, of Sidney on allegations of sexual abuse involving a five-year-old girl in 2013.

Kissel, who had led the nondenominational Sidney Cowboy Church, entered a not guilty plea to the charge in April of 2014.

Prosecutors have said the charges, which include lascivious acts and indecent exposure, are not connected with the church.

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Going to see Spotlight? Debating people who have seen it? Here’s essential background reading.

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler Dec 10, 2015

Have you seen Spotlight? Although I had serious reservations about the hype surrounding the film, I found Spotlight to be an excellent movie. It is a powerful, and surprisingly accurate, retelling of the story of how the sex-abuse scandal exploded: with a Boston Globe investigation of the cover-up in the Boston archdiocese.

It wouldn’t be accurate to say that I “enjoyed” the film. Reliving those awful days, when one inexcusable action after another came to light, and the corruption of the hierarchy was exposed, put me through an emotional wringer. Yet Spotlight made me think seriously, one more time, about the important lessons that we learned in 2002—and the lessons that have not yet been learned.

I’ll be writing more about Spotlight soon. I’ll explain how the movie, which is certainly a powerful indictment of the Boston archdiocese, is also, in a more subtle way, an indictment of the Boston Globe. For that matter, there are a few scenes in which Spotlight almost indicts itself—unintentionally, I’m sure. There’s a good deal to be learned from this film, including some lessons that the filmmakers themselves missed.

But for now I’m writing with a simple (and, I admit, self-serving) purpose. Since Spotlight has reopened discussion of the scandal—with a special focus on Boston—it’s as good a time as ever to plug my own book: The Faithful Departed: The Collapse of Boston’s Catholic Culture.. Yes, it’s a book about the scandal, but it’s not just about the scandal. Nor is it just about Boston. The late Father Richard Neuhaus, in a generous review, called it “the best book-length treatment of the sex abuse crisis, its origins and larger implications, published to date.”

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Priest paid his male ‘sex master’ from collection plate: lawsuit

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Julia Marsh December 10, 2015

A Catholic priest skimmed ​from the collection plate to ​make himself a millionaire ​and pay for drug-fueled ​bondage sessions with his male “sex master,” pay his lover’s rent and take trips to Italy, Manhattan and the Bronx, parishioners​ charge in a new lawsuit​.

The startling suit ​claims ​the Rev. Peter Miqueli​​ paid $1,000 ​a session with ​a musclebound “master” named Keith Crist, who allegedly made him drink his urine, the lawsuit said.​

​The suit names ​Father Miqueli, Crist, Cardinal Timothy Dolan and the Archdiocese of New York as defendants.

The Manhattan civil suit claims Miqueli has swiped “hundreds of thousands of dollars” in donations from St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church on Roosevelt Island and St. Frances De Chantal Church in the Bronx since 2003.

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Fr Kevin Dillon: Justice central to dignity of abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
Geelong Advertiser

December 10, 2015

Fr Kevin Dillon
Geelong Advertiser

“JIMMY” was only eight years old when he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest, soon after he started serving Mass in his local parish.

It was 1964, and he had been taught that priests were honourable people doing God’s work.

He had no idea of what to do, what to say, whom to tell.

He was bewildered, and because of what the priest had told him, even ashamed — sometimes just a little, at other times overwhelmingly guilty.

So he did nothing, said nothing, and told no one.

He had been a talented student until then — always near the top of his class. Then, inexplicably to family and teachers, his learning ran into a brick wall.

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Report into Marist Brothers case study released

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

11 December, 2015

The Royal Commission’s report of Case Study no. 13 – The response of the Marist Brothers to allegations of child sexual abuse against Brothers Kostka Chute and Gregory Sutton was released today.

The report follows a public hearing held in Canberra last year which examined the response of the Marist Brothers to allegations of child sexual abuse in schools in the ACT, NSW and Queensland.

The Marist Brothers is a Catholic Order established for the education and ‘Christian formation’ of young people. Since 1972, Marist Brothers have operated 21 schools in their own right and administered a further 74 schools on behalf of parishes or dioceses at which Brothers have been placed. Since 1984, the Marist Brothers have taught approximately 200,000 children.

Evidence before the Royal Commission showed that until the 1990s accusations or admissions of sexual misconduct by Marist Brothers were treated as highly confidential. Information concerning child sexual abuse was usually held by the Provincial (a person with direct authority over the Brothers in that Province) and, with some rare exceptions, seemed not to have been passed on to their successors or to the Provincial Council.

Between 1962 and 1993, allegations of child sexual abuse were not reported to police by the Marist Brothers. Before 1992, there was nothing kept in writing concerning the transfer of Brothers nor, before 1983, were written records kept of allegations against, or admissions by, Brothers.

Brother John (Kostka) Chute taught at various schools in Queensland, NSW and the ACT. In 2008, he was charged and convicted of 19 child sex offences against six children he taught at Marist College Canberra.

Commissioners heard the Marist Brothers knew about a number of allegations and admissions of child sexual abuse by Brother Chute but continued to transfer him from school to school.

The Commissioners found the failure to act by one Provincial resulted in a missed opportunity to remove Brother Chute from teaching or from contact with children thus putting more children at risk.

Brother Gregory Sutton also taught at a number of schools in Queensland, NSW and the ACT. In 1996 he pleaded guilty to 67 child sex offences in relation to 15 students at schools in New South Wales.

In 1985 Brother Sutton commenced teaching at St Carthage’s Primary School. In 1987, he was removed from this school. Although described as being due to problems with interpersonal relationships with staff, the Commissioners found his removal was only after:

* a number of complaints of inappropriate behaviour with children, primarily girls
* a direction given by the school’s executive to refrain from that conduct which Brother Sutton breached by being alone and in physical contact with two girls
* a final warning about this conduct, and
* a further allegation.

Commissioners also heard that successive Provincials seemed to not have passed on information regarding Brother Sutton’s behavior to their successors and the Provincial Council.

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Wentzville man sues Marianists over alleged abuse by clergy

MISSOURI
Fox 2

ST. LOUIS (AP) A Wentzville man who attended a Catholic high school in Creve Coeur in the 1970s has filed a lawsuit accusing the Marianists of hiding knowledge of child sex abuse by priests.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reports the lawsuit is against Chaminade College Preparatory School, Marianist Province of the United States and the Rev. Martin Solma, who heads the St. Louis-based Roman Catholic order.

The suit alleges the defendants lied to “multiple” victims by telling them they were the first to report sex abuse by clergy.

Fifty-seven-year-old Christopher Wimmer filed the suit Tuesday and said in a prepared statement that he asked the Marianists about the abuse years ago.

Wimmer alleges he was abused by two priests who are now deceased.

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Parishioners: St. Frances de Chantal pastor issued management directives by Cardinal Dolan

NEW YORK
Bronx Times

AUGUST 14, 2015

By Patrick Rocchio

An embattled church pastor has heard from a higher authority.

The Archdiocese of New York issued directives to the pastor of St. Frances de Chantal Church, encouraging him to improve his stewardship after parishioners raised concerns about his handling of cash donations and his strained relations with his flock.

The parishioners, totalling about 30, have learned that seven directives have been issued by Timothy Cardinal Dolan to Fr. Peter Miqueli, pastor of the Throggs Neck house of worship.

An official Archdiocese of New York spokesman did not respond to requests for confirmation of the directives’ contents.

Two of the church leaders, Jack Lynch and Janet Bitner, said that while they were not permitted to see the actual letter Fr. Miqueli received, key portions were read to them by an Archdiocean representative, acting a a mediator, at a restaurant meeting they attended in City Island several weeks ago.

Among the alleged management directives are:

• the Archdiocese of New York will conduct an audit of St. Frances’ finances
• the pastor must publish parish collections in the church bulletin, with the figures verified by an impartial witness.
• annual financial statements must be issued.
• the pastor must appoint a Parish Finance Council
• Fr. Miqueli must appoint two new trustees, which must be selected from among long-time parishioners
• Fr. Miqueli must form a parish council, with the first step being the establishment of a nominating committee.

So far, said Bitner, it does not appear that the pastor has moved on any of the directive’s demands, but she added that the group has to give the priest some time.

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EXCLUSIVE: Bronx priest stole more than $1M from two NYC churches, used the cash on wild S&M romance with beefy boyfriend: lawsuit

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY BARBARA ROSS, LARRY MCSHANE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Thursday, December 10, 2015

Father, forgive him.

A scandalous lawsuit accuses a Bronx priest of looting more than $1 million from a pair of city parishes, then spending the cash on a long-running S&M romance with a muscle-bound boyfriend.

The Rev. Peter Miqueli reportedly paid $1,000 per rough sex session with his hunky lover, who demanded the priest address him as “Master” — and drink his urine, the lawsuit said.

The sex slave priest and his boy-toy shared a house in Brick, N.J., after Miqueli paid $264,000 cash six years ago, according to the fifty-shades-of-pray lawsuit.

Miqueli, 53, was also accused of stealing money donated to fix a church pipe organ, siphoning funds from a parish thrift shop and getting high on drugs provided by a Bronx parishioner.

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EXPELLED SEMINARIAN SUES AFTER GETTING KICKED OUT FOR ALLEGED SODOMY

OHIO
Church Militant

by Ryan Fitzgerald • ChurchMilitant.com • December 9, 2015

The seminary’s vice rector said there was a “credible accusation of homosexual activity”

COLUMBUS, Ohio (ChurchMilitant.com) – An expelled seminarian in Ohio has filed a lawsuit against his now-former seminary, the Pontifical College Josephinum (PCJ), after he was kicked out for alleged sodomy.

This past October, the vice rector of PCJ, Rev. Walter Oxley, told the ex-seminarian, who’s filed the complaint anonymously as “John Doe,” that he’d discovered a “credible accusation of homosexual activity” against Doe.

According to Doe, Msgr. Christopher Schreck, rector-president of the seminary, was at the meeting when the seminary confronted him about the matter. Based on the complaint, Schreck was apparently quite concerned about the student, encouraging him to “get [his] life in order and to avail [himself] of the sacraments.”

Doe argues that Schreck’s alleged involvement with the dismissal violates canon law, since Schreck was apparently his spiritual director.

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Suggestion to Jack Dunn: Put up or shut up

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

By David Clohessy

I have some advice – and a request – for Jack Dunn, the Boston College PR guy who claims he’s unfairly portrayed in Spotlight. Show us the records.

[Boston.com]

I’m not unsympathetic to him. Like Dunn, I have kids. Like Dunn, I’d like them to know good things I’ve done. And like Dunn, I’m not keen on being misrepresented and misunderstood. So if a film portrayed me in a negative light, I’d certainly be upset.

But surely Dunn knows that Catholic church officials estimate more than 100,000 boys and girls in the US have been sexually violated by priests. Surely he knows that bishops have concealed and are concealing child sex crimes committed by hundreds or thousands of predatory priests, nuns, seminarians, brothers, teachers and fellow bishops.

So surely Dunn understands that many of us are skeptical of his claims that he urged school officials to “create a hotline so alums can call in and report anything they know; hire an independent child advocate to review each case; report any criminality to the police; and provide counseling and compensation for the victims.”

So why not show us the emails and memos about all of this? But first, let’s look at each of these four notions more closely.

–A hotline for abuse victims? Is that a good thing? It certainly is good PR. But maybe it’s yet another way for church officials to try to handle child sex crimes quietly and internally? (Why not urge victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call law enforcement with information or suspicions about abuse?)

–An internal review of each abuse case? Is that a good thing? It certainly is good PR. But maybe it’s yet another way for church officials to try to handle child sex crimes quietly and internally? (Why not urge victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call law enforcement with information or suspicions about abuse?)

–Report criminality to the police? Obviously, that’s a good thing. But it certainly is good PR too, especially because in a private institution and a secretive church hierarchy, there’s no way to ever really know if this suggestion was or is followed. (Again, why not just give school records about abuse reports to the experienced and unbiased professionals in law enforcement?)

–Counseling for victims? That’s gotta be a good thing, right? Well, it too is good PR. But maybe it’s yet another way for church officials to try to handle child sex crimes quietly and internally, by making victims dependent on them and coming to them for “help” and worry that this help will end if they speak up or take legal action? (Why not set up independent counseling programs, in which victims aren’t forced to report their betrayal to the very institution that betrayed them?)

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Would-Be Priest Fights Gay-Based Expulsion

OHIO
Courhouse News Service

By KYLE ANNE UNISS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (CN) – A would-be Roman Catholic priest wants court help after his seminary expelled him over a supposedly “credible accusation of homosexual activity.”

The seminarian in question filed the complaint anonymously as John Doe last week in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas.

He claims he has been a member of the Pontifical College Josephinum’s “priestly formation program” since 2010.

Though expected to graduate this May with a master’s degree in theology, Doe says the Columbus, Ohio, school sent him packing after an ambush meeting on Oct. 10.

The Rev. Walter Oxley, the school’s vice rector and a priest in Toledo, told Doe that his investigation found a “credible accusation of homosexual activity,” according to the Dec. 2 action.

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Council of Cardinals meeting this week with Pontiff to continue planning for Vatican reforms

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Culture

December 10, 2015

The Council of Cardinals began its 12th session on December 10 meeting with Pope Francis to continue outlining plans for reform of the Roman Curia.

At their most recent meeting, in September, the “C9” finalized a proposal for the creation of a new Congregation for Laity, Family and Life. Pope Francis formally inaugurated that dicastery in October.

The Vatican has not announced the main subject(s) for discussion at this week’s meetings, which will conclude on Saturday, December 12.

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Untold Story Of How The ‘Spotlight’ Team Turned A Journalism Procedural Into An Oscar Front-Runner – AwardsLine

UNITED STATES
Deadline

By Mike Fleming Jr
December 9, 2015

Spotlight has been in the Oscar hunt since Toronto Film Festival audiences gave it a long, thunderous standing ovation. At the heart of the film is a team of dogged journalists whose exposé of the shameful Boston Archdiocese cover-up of pedophile priests led to the forced resignation of the all-powerful Cardinal Bernard Law. The film subsequently has been as well-reviewed as any this fall, even getting a thumbs up from the Boston Archdiocese, which acknowledged the role the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Spotlight team played in forcing the church to confront a malignancy and renew its vow to stop predatory priests, who previously were moved to other parishes, leaving shattered lives and hush-money payouts in their wakes. Despite its incendiary subject matter, Spotlight so far hasn’t had to bear the brunt of accuracy attacks that hobbled so many fact-based Best Picture aspirants in recent years.

Spotlight director Tom McCarthyDirector Tom McCarthy and his co-writer Josh Singer took a page from The Globe’s investigative Spotlight team playbook: They stuck to the facts. For The Globe, that mandate grew out of a series of 1992 stories the paper wrote about predator priest James Porter, which caused Cardinal Law to threaten to bring down the wrath of God to ostracize the newspaper in the Catholic community comprising the majority of its readership.

The topic of predatory Catholic priests was just as polarizing for Hollywood, a factor in DreamWorks dropping the picture before Open Road signed on. Other inherent risks in the film were structural: no traditional lead, and, as Spotlight reporter Mike Rezendes says, “no Hollywood clichés, no car chases, no sex scenes and no guns. Just a true story.”

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Protect Your Child from Sexual Predators by Breaking through Stereotypes

UNITED STATES
Parenting

By Joelle Casteix

Nobody loves a stereotype better than a child sex predator. Whether the stereotype is about the “creepy guy in the trench coat,” the “hot for teacher” fallacy, our collective denial of incest, or our emphasis on “stranger danger,” predators know that the more parents rely on stereotypes, the easier it is for those predators to gain easy access to vulnerable children.

Stereotype No. 1: Most abuse happens as a result of stranger abduction or by use of force.

This stereotype is one of the most widely believed and the most damaging. It has kept victims silent and children at risk for decades.

And it all boils down to our over-reliance on “stranger danger.”

Even now, when it comes to educating and empower our children about abuse, parents and educators continue to focus on abduction. The media is quick to follow along, continually covering stories about child kidnappings and attacks. And that’s exactly what the vast majority of child predators want us to focus on.

According to the California Attorney General’s office, approximately 90 percent of children who are sexually abused in the United States know their abuser.

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Review of Spotlight – Movie

UNITED STATES
No Longer on Pedestals

This is a heads-up for anyone still doubting the truth of clergy sexual abuse reports being made against priests in the Catholic Church. This movie exposes the Church Officials’ appalling behavior in just the Boston area; shocking everyone in 2002.

I recently viewed Spotlight at a St Louis South County theatre. Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams portray journalists assigned to investigate reports by abuse survivors in Boston. A specific investigative team of the Globe newspaper, referred to as the Spotlight Team, exposes heartbreaking evidence of the crimes committed against vulnerable children by predator priests, as well as the continuous, outrageous cover-ups by Church Officials.

Spotlight shows how the Team gathered all the incriminating facts, having to be determined in getting documents sealed by the Church released for public knowledge. Their months-long investigation eventually proved that cover-ups reached the highest echelons of the Church, right to the Vatican.

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OR–Pedophile priest case settles; Victims group responds

OREGON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015

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

An abuse and cover up suit against the Portland archdiocese and a convicted predator priest has settled. We deplore the secrecy surrounding this case.

[Portland Tribune]

The cleric, Fr. Angel Armando Perez, was the only priest ordained in the archdiocese in 2002.

We fully understand why the young boy’s family would not want to take this case to trial. The parents are surely most concerned with the emotional well-being and recovery of their wounded child.

That said, however, we are sad that apparently no records about Fr. Perez, and his church supervisors and colleagues who may have hidden his crimes, will be disclosed. And the amount of the settlement, which might deter future recklessness and callousness and deceit by other church officials, remains secret.

We hope Portland Catholic officials will honor their repeated pledges to be “open and transparent” about clergy sex crimes and cover ups by being more forthcoming about this case and others.

When Fr. Perez was criminally charged, the Oregonian reported that “The Archdiocese of Portland offered an open-ended loan to the Rev. Angel Armando Perez to cover the legal fees of (his expensive defense lawyer).” We hope Portland area Catholics will insist that Archbishop Alexander Sample divulge whether this “loan” has been or is being repaid or not.

When this suit was filed, church spokesman Bud Bunce referred to Fr. Perez’ crimes as “misconduct.”

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The Spotlight and NCR

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Ken Briggs | Dec. 10, 2015

Tom Fox, the recently retired NCR publisher, may choke on his English muffin out of sheer modesty if he reads this, but I see clear shades of him and NCR in the fabulous movie, “Spotlight.”

As throngs of viewers have discovered, the film depicts the Boston Globe’s exposure of the child abuse scandal in that city that shows both church and newspaper with rare candor. The church fights to keep its secrets and the Globe confronts its own pattern of protecting the church from bad news a means of pleasing its 40 percent Catholic readership.

The turning point is the arrival of the Globe’s new editor, Marty Baron, who insists on pursuing the evidence of major harm regardless of the reaction of the church or the public. Courage finds its way where fear of the archdiocese stifled coverage. Step by step the case unfolds, to the shock of the reporters themselves.

What elevates this movie to uncommon ground is that it neither villifies the church as a whole or casts the Globe as a purist hero. It focuses on the machinations of the criminal priests and their mishandling by Cardinal Law, but never impugns the integrity of a single staple of Catholic belief itself, except as its own teachings are violated. Law is sunk by his own actions, not because he’s being defiled for upholding the church’s core values and beliefs. …

For decades, NCR has exhibited those same qualities under the aegis of Tom Fox. The paper’s constituency and setting strikingly contrast with those of a purely secular publication like the Globe, which in some ways has made the goal of truthfulness tougher. Most obviously, having “Catholic” in its name has led many to believe it belongs to the institution and therefore exists to promote the church’s own version of itself whereas in reality it is independent and relatively crusading.

Tom Fox was until a few months ago the inheritor of that record of confronting the often unwelcome stories of wrongdoing and injustice. As publisher, he heard the often barbed protests and, if I’m not mistaken, veiled warnings from both laity and top rungs of hierarchy. In fact, no similar publication existed to screen the church’s practices and decisions for signs that Vatican II was either being enhanced or curtailed, that clergy were being treated justly or unjustly by the church’s own standards, or that things were either what the church portrayed them to be or not. It was overseen from a Catholic “progressive” frame of mind, but like all papers that let you know where they stand editorially, NCR let you know where they stood in matters of opinion.

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Suit against St. Luke, archdiocese has settled out of court

OREGON
Portland Tribune

Created on Thursday, 10 December 2015 10:51 | Written by Tyler Francke

An $8.5 million lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Portland, along with St. Luke Catholic Church in Woodburn, has been dismissed following an out-of-court settlement.

The complaint, filed last year on behalf of an unnamed Salem boy, was in connection with a 2012 sex abuse case involving former local priest Angel Armando Perez.

Perez was a priest at St. Luke in August 2012, when he was charged with first-degree sex abuse (a Measure 11 offense), driving under the influence of intoxicants and two counts of furnishing alcohol to a minor.

Under the terms of a plea agreement, Perez pleaded guilty in April 2013 and was assessed the mandatory minimum sentence for the sex abuse charge — six years, three months — which he is currently serving at Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla.

The complaint was filed by the conservator and family of Perez’s victim, who was 12 at the time and who is identified in court documents only as “J.T.”

The case was scheduled for trial in Multnomah County court in March. However, on Oct. 26, a notice filed in the court record indicated the case had been dismissed “pending settlement,” and the trial and all other pending hearings were canceled.

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Oral Arguments on Damage Caps in Child Rape Case at Ohio Supreme Court, December 15, 2015

OHIO
MMD Newswire

What: Supreme Court of Ohio case 2014-1953: Jessica Simpkins et al. v. Grace Brethren Church of Delaware, Ohio (jurisdictional appeal). This case addresses the injustice to minor victims of sexual assault whose compensation is capped by Ohio law(1). This law harms victims while protecting the rights of those who sexually abuse children as well as those who aid and abet the abusers.

Who: Attorney John Fitch will present oral arguments representing the victim, who was raped twice by her pastor at age 15. Opposing counsel will deliver oral arguments on behalf of the appellee, Grace Brethren Church.

Why: The case is on appeal before the Ohio Supreme Court regarding the question of whether Ohio’s tort damages cap violates minor sexual assault victims’ constitutional rights to due process of law, equal protection of the laws, right to a remedy, and trial by jury. This law protects sexual predators while depriving children of their rightful compensation due to devastating pain and suffering. In this case, the jury awarded the victim $3,500,000 in pain and suffering, but her compensation was effectively capped at $250,000 for two rapes. Under the law, 50 rapes in a single course of conduct would equate to $5,000 per rape, out of which the victim pays her attorney fees and expenses.

When: Tuesday, December 15, 2015. Simpkins is the third case presented after oral arguments begin at 9:00 AM.

Where:
The Ohio Supreme Court
65 S. Front St.
Columbus, OH 43215
(614) 387-9000

Contact:
The Fitch Law Firm
900 Michigan Ave.
Columbus, OH 43215
Phone: (614) 545-3930
Fax: (614) 545-2930
Email: Clerk@thefitchlawfirm.com
Website: www.thefitchlawfirm.com

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IA–Victims challenge SC bishop on abuse

IOWA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release, Thursday, December 10, 2015

Statement by SNAP leader Tim Lennon who was abused in Sioux City (415-312-5820, tlennon@snapnetwork.org)

Many of us are confused by and skeptical of Sioux City’s bishop’s claim that he’s starting a new program to teach kids about avoiding child molesters. We suspect it’s just a public relations move. We hope we’re wrong.

The “new program” is touted in the Catholic diocesan newspaper under the headline “Diocese of Sioux City Promulgates Safe Environment Program in Catholic Schools.”

[Catholic Globe]

Such a program was supposed to be set up 13 years ago when bishops were pressured to adopt their first-ever national church abuse policy. According to Article 12 of that policy in 2002 (called the Charter for the Protection of Children and Youth), dioceses are to “provide education and training for children. . .and others about ways to make and maintain a safe environment for children and young people.”

[Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People]

We urge Bishop Walker Nickless to hold a news conference, give more information and take questions from reporters about this supposedly “new program.” We ask for other concrete actions:

~~Make a commitment to report to civil authorities, police and child protective agencies, of abuse or a reasonable suspicion of abuse previous to any church action; aggressively encourage victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to call police and prosecutors about known and suspected clergy sex crimes and cover ups in the Sioux City area, no matter when they took place.

~~Visit every parish to seek any child harmed by sex abuse and offer aid and comfort

~~Open the books, notify each parish that has be plagued with clergy who have abused children; permanently and prominently post on the diocesan website the names, photos and work histories of every single child molesting cleric who spent time in Sioux City Diocese.

~~Make any new “Safe Environment Program” real by speaking from the pulpit; confirm the errors of the past; encourage awareness of parents, teachers and the community of the dangers

Dozens of US bishops are clearly worried about the new, highly-acclaimed film “Spotlight.” It details how dedicated journalists and brave victims exposed decades of abuse and cover up in the Boston Archdiocese.

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OH–Group hopes state damages cap is lifted in abuse cases

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015

Statement by Claudia Vercellotti of Toledo SNAP (419-345-9291, SNAPtoledo@mail.com)

Next week, the Ohio Supreme Court will have a chance to lift Ohio’s unwise cap on damages for victims of horrific child sex crimes. We hope the justices will side with innocent, vulnerable kids and deeply wounded adults over institutional wrongdoers.

[NBC4i]

Financial penalties deter wrongdoing. It’s just that simple. That’s why we support the effort to lift the cap on damages. As a society, we must encourage, not discourage, victims of sexual violence to come forward, seek justice, and expose and punish those who commit or conceal child sex crimes.

It’s absurd and disingenuous for business lobby groups to claim that the clergy sex abuse and cover up case involved here is an “outlier.” Thousands of boys and girls are sexually violated every year in Ohio. Many of these crimes happen in schools, churches, camps and day care centers where officials know or should know how to prevent this horror.

But when these officials act recklessly or callously, they must be held responsible. That’s what jury awards do. And these awards make other employers and co-workers start behaving more responsibly when they see or suspect child sex crimes.

We applaud the courage of Jessica Simpkins, who was 15 years old when she was raped by her pastor, Rev. Brian Williams, at Grace Brethren Church in Sunbury. (Williams went to prison.) We are grateful she exposed wrongdoing at this church and that a jury sent a strong pro-child, anti-abuse signal. We hope that Ohio’s Supreme Court will send an equally strong signal to those who might be tempted to ignore, hide, minimize or even enable similar crimes in the future.

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People v Weberman

NEW YORK
Justia

People v Weberman 2015 NY Slip Op 09128 Decided on December 9, 2015 Appellate Division, Second Department Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.

Decided on December 9, 2015 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK Appellate Division, Second Judicial Department
WILLIAM F. MASTRO, J.P.
THOMAS A. DICKERSON
SHERI S. ROMAN
ROBERT J. MILLER, JJ.
2013-00972
(Ind. No. 1589/11)

[*1]The People of the State of New York, respondent,
v
Nechemya Weberman, appellant.

Mischel & Horn, P.C., New York, N.Y. (Richard E. Mischel of counsel), for appellant.

Kenneth P. Thompson, District Attorney, Brooklyn, N.Y. (Leonard Joblove and Anthea H. Bruffee of counsel), for respondent.

DECISION & ORDER

Appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County (Ingram, J.), rendered January 22, 2013, convicting him of course of sexual conduct against a child in the first degree, criminal sexual act in the second degree (12 counts), criminal sexual act in the third degree (2 counts), sexual abuse in the second degree (18 counts), sexual abuse in the third degree (25 counts), and endangering the welfare of a child, upon a jury verdict, and imposing sentence.

ORDERED that the judgment is modified, on the law, by vacating the convictions of sexual abuse in the second degree under counts 45 and 46 of the indictment (submitted on the jury’s verdict sheet as counts 31 and 32), vacating the sentences imposed thereon, and dismissing those counts of the indictment; as so modified, the judgment is affirmed.

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Convicted molester has 2 counts thrown out, still has 100 year jail sentence

NEW YORK
New York Post

By Emily Saul and Joe Tacopino December 10, 2015

A court on Wednesday tossed out two counts of sex abuse against a Brooklyn counselor convicted of child molestation — but he will still rot in jail for the rest of his life.

Satmar Hasidic youth counselor Nechemya Web­erman, who abused an underage girl from 2007 to 2010, had two of the 59 counts leveled against him thrown out by an appellate court.

The two convictions of sexual abuse in the second degree were overturned because the court found the evidence was not sufficient to support guilt in Counts 45 and 46 of the original indictment.

But Weberman, a 57-year-old father of 10, will still spend the next 100 years locked up.

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Appellate court upholds perv Hasidic counselor’s 50-year sentence

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY CHRISTINA CARREGA-WOODBY NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Thursday, December 10, 2015

A 50-year prison sentence for a Hasidic Jewish leader convicted of sexually molesting a young girl for three years was upheld by an appellate court.

Nechemya Weberman, 56, filed the appeal shortly after he was sentenced in January 2013 by Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice John Ingram for his horrendous acts to a then-12-year-old girl he was supposed to be counseling.

Weberman’s attorneys filed the appeal in a bid to overturn the conviction, citing that they were not allowed to present a fair case during the jury trial.

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‘Sex-abuse’ priest to get fast-track trial

ITALY
ANSA

(ANSA) – Bari, December 10 – A preliminary hearing judge on Thursday ruled a suspected pedophile priest will get a fast-track trial.

Father Giampiero Peschiulli, 73, was placed under house arrest in May on suspicion of molesting two altar boys while he was the parish priest of Brindisi church.

He is charged with sexually abusing the victims aggravated by “abuse of moral and religious authority”.

The alleged offenses date back to 2012, when the boys were not yet 14, and reportedly lasted through 2014.

The prelate was unmasked by a satirical TV show that specialises in stings, Le Iene (Reservoir Dogs).

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Clergy abuse compo not enough: inquiry

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

A $47,000 compensation payout to the victim of a pedophile priest is not enough, a priest has told an inquiry.

Australian Army chaplain and former Ballarat bishop’s secretary Monsignor Glynn Murphy says compensation needs to be a whole package.

Former Diocese of Ballarat priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale has been jailed for abusing 53 children, including victim BWA who he abused for two years.

Dr Kristine Hanscombe QC told the child abuse royal commission BWA initiated proceedings to get compensation shortly after Ridsdale was first convicted in 1993.

Monsignor Murphy agreed taking five years to settle a compensation claim when someone had been convicted for the offence was an inordinate amount of time.

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JASON KANDER HITS SEN. ROY BLUNT WITH MEMO

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

. . .Duluth’s Catholic diocese has declared bankruptcy because of an $8 million verdict in a pedophile priest case involving a former Missouri and southern Illinois cleric. He’s Fr. Vincent Fitzgerald, who spent 13 years in Belleville (and shorter stints in Alton, Godfrey and Peoria) until his death in 2009. He also worked in Mansfield in the Springfield-Cape Girardeau diocese. .

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Former parish priest Robert Couture found guilty of theft over $5K

CANADA
Windsor Star

DECEMBER 10, 2015

Jurors returned with a guilty verdict in the case of the former Ste. Anne Parish pastor shortly after 10 a.m. Thursday.

Assistant Crown attorney Tom Meehan says he might seek jail time for the disgraced priest. He doesn’t know how much but the maximum is 10 years.

Jurors began deliberations late Wednesday following closing arguments and a two-hour charge by Superior Court Justice Scott Campbell.

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Rev. Robert Couture guilty for theft over $5,000

CANADA
CBC News

A southern Ontario Catholic priest accused of embezzling more than $150,000 from his Tecumseh, Ont., church was found guilty Thursday morning on one count of theft over $5,000.

Assistant Crown attorney Tom Meehan said he will seek jail time for Rev. Robert Couture.

Couture could face up to 10 years in jail, Meehan said outside Ontario Provincial Court in Windsor.

Couture, 52, was released on a promise to appear Feb. 5, at which time a date will be set for sentencing.

Meehan was pleased with the jury’s verdict, saying Couture was a trusted figure in the community, who broke that trust.

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Fed up of sexual abuse by Mathura priest, 3 boys bludgeon him to death

INDIA
Times of India

Ishita Mishra,TNN | Dec 10, 2015

AGRA: Parmeshwar Das, a mahant in Govardhan, Mathura, was gruesomely killed by three youths who told police they were tired of constant abuse from him. While two are in their early 20s, one is a minor.

Police said that one of the youths has already been awarded life imprisonment by a court in Panna (Madhya Pradesh) for killing a woman with axe in 2013.

Mathura senior superintendent of police Rakesh Singh said that the youth was absconding from Panna since the judge announced life sentence for him in 2014. He was living in the ashram in Govardhan for past several months.

“The mahant was found dead in his Akhil Bharitiya Kirar Ashram in Govardhan block of Mathura district on Tuesday. His face was smashed with a brick and later he was strangulated. We were clear that some insider is involved in the crime as no outsider was allowed inside the ashram during late hours. Our cops interrogated all the followers of the mahant and found discrepancies in the statement given by these three. We arrested them and later they confessed to the crime,” the SSP added.

The senior cop claimed that the crime was not planned and the boys killed the priest in a fit of rage.

“The mahant used to sexually exploit his followers. Many others in the ashram too accepted this. The accused killed him in a fit of rage as they failed to resist the abuse,” the SSP said.

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“Carol,” “Spotlight” and “The Big Short” lead Golden Globes nominees

UNITED STATES
CBS News

Last Updated Dec 10, 2015 10:14 AM EST

“Carol” swept up five nominations, leading the pack this year for Golden Globe Awards nominations. The film picked up nods for Best Picture and Best Actress for both Cate Blanchett and Rooney Mara. …

In an awards season that has so far seen honors spread around, Tom McCarthy’s “Spotlight” came into the Globe nominations as the Oscar favorite. While it took three top Globe nominations Thursday, including best director for McCarthy and best screenplay, its ensemble cast is failing to stand out from the pack.

After the Screen Actors Guild passed over Michael Keaton and Mark Ruffalo, the Globes did, too. Ruffalo, however, was nominated for best actor in a comedy for his performance as a bipolar father in “Infinitely Polar Bear.”

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