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.

February 11, 2016

BIASED REPORTING ON EX-PRIEST

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on media bias in stories about an ex-priest:

John Feit was arrested this week for killing a young woman in 1960. The only newsworthy aspect of this story is that he is an ex-priest.

AP, CNN, NBC, as well as many other media outlets, accurately referred to Feit as an ex-priest. But not all were fair, the most prominent of which was the Washington Post. Its headline read, “Break in ‘Unholy’ Cold Case: Police Arrest Former Beauty Queen’s Priest in Her 1960 Killing.”

Notice that the victim is a former beauty queen, but her alleged victimizer is not a former priest. Indeed, the reader doesn’t learn of Feit’s former status until several paragraphs later.

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.

Eerie photos show chilling scenes inside austere abandoned Catholic seminary haunted by allegations of sex abuse by priests

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

[photos]

These are the haunting pictures from inside of an abandoned catholic seminary which was deserted more than twenty years ago and rocked by historic sexual abuse allegations.

St Joseph’s Seminary in Upholland, Lancashire, saw its last batch of pupils leave in 1992 and now the vast halls and dormitories hold just a few stark remnants of the hundreds of pupils that once flooded the halls and chapels.

A loan, rusty record player which would once brought music to entire classes of animated youngsters lies in the centre of a huge empty hall which is now blanketed in a thick layer of dust.

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.

AZ–Ex-priest who worked in NM is arrested for murder; Victims respond

ARIZONA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2016

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003,bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

An ex-priest who worked in New Mexico and lives in Arizona has been arrested for murdering a Texas girl. We are deeply grateful that John Feit has finally been charged. Now, Catholic officials in all three states have a moral and civic duty to prod other witnesses to step forward.

[Monitor]

In the 1960s, Feit worked at the Jemez Springs-based Servants of the Paraclete, a Catholic facility where predator priests were housed and purportedly “treated.” That was “after his criminal problems in South Texas prompted his bosses to remove him from parish work” and he “had been convicted in a young woman’s sexual assault,” according to the Dallas Morning News.

[BishopAccountability.org]

We fear he may have hurt young women in New Mexico too.

We hope that this news brings some hope to Irene Garza’s brave and devoted family. We applaud them for their persistence and patience. And we hope that anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy crimes or misdeeds by Feit – or cover ups by his church supervisors will call police, expose wrongdoers, protect others and start healing.

We also hope that Santa Fe Archbishop John Wester, Phoenix Bishop Thomas Olmsted and Brownsville Bishop Daniel Flores will use personal appeals, parish bulletins, church websites and pulpit announcements to beg others with information or suspicions about Feit to call law enforcement immediately. Now is no time for Catholic officials to act powerless or for citizens to be complacent. Every shred of evidence – no matter how small, old or seemingly insignificant – should be withheld from police and prosecutors.

Three months ago, we wrote to Hildalgo County prosecutor Ricardo Rodriguez about this case. We are certain, however, that the diligence of the Garza family that made the difference here. Again, we are grateful to them for the courage and compassion they have shown throughout this ordeal.

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.

AZ–Accused murderer was regular church volunteer;” Bishop must act, SNAP says

ARIZONA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Feb. 11, 2016

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 accused murderer and ex-priest was “a regular church volunteer” in Phoenix, the Washington Post reports. In light of this revelation, it’s crucial that Bishop Thomas Olmsted break his silence, take decisive action and help prosecutors pursue Feit.

[Washington Post]

[The Monitor]

We call on Olmsted to disclose which local parish Feit volunteered at and who brought Feit to Phoenix and hired him at the St. Vincent de Paul Society. At the very least, this information will deter future recklessness.

We also call on Olmsted – and every Phoenix diocesan or parish employee – to beat the bushes, spread the word and seek out others who may have seen, suspected or suffered his crimes, and urge them to call 911.

With minimal effort, using cheap but effective communications tools like church websites, parish bulletins and pulpit announcements, Olmsted and church staff might turn up one more wounded person who is suffering in shame, silence and self-blame. Or they may find one victim or witness or whistleblower who could be the difference between success or failure in the criminal case against Feit.

This is what Jesus told us to do in the parable of the Good Shepherd: to go out into the cold, the dark and the rain to find that one lost, wounded sheep.

Feit was sent to New Mexico long before Olmsted was. So it’s no skin off Olmsted’s teeth to do this outreach. Even if it produced no results, the effort alone would burnish Olmstead’s image. There’s really little reason, besides timidity and tradition, for Olmsted to be passive and silent here, unless he’s afraid that a public plea will bring even more still-hidden clergy crimes or cover ups to the surface.

Olmsted isn’t the only bishop with an obligation for outreach here. Prelates in New Mexico, Texas and Missouri, where Feit also spent time, have this duty too.

Regardless of what Catholic workers do or don’t do, we in SNAP beg every single person who has any information or suspicions about Feit – no matter how small, old, vague or seemingly meaningless it might seem – to call police. That’s the least we can and should do to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded and expose the truth.

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.

Kendall House: Savile abuse case doctor leads review

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A doctor who led an inquiry into the Jimmy Savile scandal is to chair a review of a former care home where it is claimed children were drugged.

Dr Sue Proctor is to chair a panel looking into the treatment of former residents at the Church of England’s Kendall House in Gravesend.

A 2009 BBC investigation found an ex-resident who said she was given drugs more than 1,200 times at the Kent home.

Dr Proctor led inquiries into sex abuse by Savile at Leeds General Infirmary.

Her report in 2014 found 60 people said they were abused at the Leeds hospital by the Ex-BBC DJ, between 1962 and 2009.

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

Vatican tells new bishops they don’t “necessarily” need to report sex abuse of children

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Thu, 11 Feb 2016

The National Secular Society has expressed its concern over guidelines for newly appointed bishops published by the Vatican which state that bishops do not always need to report clerical sex abuse to the authorities.

The guidance reportedly states that “According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds”.

The NSS, which has campaigned for ten years, including at the United Nations, to expose clerical abuse and the rape and sexual abuse of minors, strongly criticised the guidance for flouting secular law and the recommendations of the United Nations.

Keith Porteous Wood, NSS executive director, commented: “It is unfortunately no surprise that these guidelines encourage bishops not to report suspected abuse, rather than obligating them to do so as the UN recommended specifically to the Vatican in 2014.”

In 2014 the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child recommended to the Holy See that the Vatican “Establish clear rules, mechanisms and procedures for the mandatory reporting of all suspected cases of child sexual abuse and exploitation to law enforcement authorities.”

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

Victims’ advocacy group rejects Bishop Rozanski’s apology for sexual abuse by Catholic clergy

MASSACHUSETTS
MassLive

By Dan Glaun | dglaun@masslive.com
on February 11, 2016

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, the victims advocacy group that has long clashed with the Catholic Church over its clergy sexual abuse scandal, is not accepting the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield’s apology.

In a pastoral letter released on Ash Wednesday, the Most. Rev. Mitchell T. Rozanski sought to welcome Catholics distanced or disillusioned with the Church back into the fold. The letter included a direct apology for the Diocese’s role in the sexual abuse scandal, which led to more than $12 million in settlements to dozens of victims.

“First and foremost, I apologize to the victims of clergy sexual abuse, their families and friends, and all those scandalized by the Church’s failure to protect our young people and for any lack of diligence in responding,” Rozanski wrote.

In his pastoral letter issued on Ash Wednesday, Bishop Mitchell Rozanski wrote that the church, inspired by the approachable tenor of Pope Francis’ approach to the papacy, is rededicating itself to evangelism.

“Springfield’s bishop is issuing an apology when he should be protecting kids, exposing predators, punishing enablers and releasing abuse records,” wrote Barbara Dorris, SNAP’s outreach director. “Tangible steps will do more to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded that all the words, gestures and apologies.”

Allegations of sexual abuse in Springfield stretched to the top of the diocese; former bishop Thomas Dupre, who oversaw the first round of discipline against abusive priests when the scandal broke in the early 2000s, was himself accused of child molestation in 2004. Dupre resigned from the diocese and was criminally indicted, but those charges were later dropped due to the statute of limitations on the 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.

Bishops not obliged to report clerical child abuse, Vatican document says

IRELAND
Newstalk

A Vatican document for new bishops states it is “not necessarily” their duty to report claims of clerical abuse.

The Vatican recently released the guidelines, and are seeking feedback on them.

It did state that clergy must be aware of laws in the area they minister.

“According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds,” the training document states.

The Guardian reports that the training guidelines were written by French monsignor and psychotherapist, Tony Anatrella.

He also serves as a consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family.

Maeve Lewis is the executive director of One in Four. She says she is deeply shocked by the news.

“Given the history of clerical abuse in this country, we all know the sort of culture that that can create – and the very dangerous position it leaves vulnerable children in”, she told Newstalk Breakfast.

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.

Archbishop says all allegations of clerical abuse must be reported

IRELAND
Irish Times

Patsy McGarry

Archbishop Diarmuid Martin has said all allegations of clerical abuse in Ireland must be reported to gardaí, responding to a new Vatican document saying bishops had discretion on reporting abuse to authorities.

“The norms in Ireland are very clear – all allegations must and are reported to the gardaí,” he said.
He added that co-operation with the gardaí has been very productive from the perspective of the Archdiocese.

“Gardaí have the ability and the expertise to investigate matters that diocesan personnel would not.

“Over the years, we have established very good working relationships with the Gardai which has been helpful to both sides.”

Earlier on Thursday the One in Four organisation expressed shock at the implications of the new Vatican document.

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 Vatican guidelines for bishops make reporting abuse to police optional

UNITED STATES
American Thinker

By Rick Moran

Two decades of scandals involving Catholic dioceses covering up allegations of sexual abuse of minors by clergy apparently hasn’t made much of an impression on the Vatican.

The coverups have come close to destroying the Roman Catholic Church. And yet, a new policy guideline for bishops released this month state that it is “not necessarily” the duty of bishops to report accusations of clerical child abuse and that only victims or their families should make the decision to report abuse to police.

Guardian:

A document that spells out how senior clergy members ought to deal with allegations of abuse, which was recently released by the Vatican, emphasised that, though they must be aware of local laws, bishops’ only duty was to address such allegations internally.

“According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds,” the training document states.

The training guidelines were written by a controversial French monsignor and psychotherapist, Tony Anatrella, who serves as a consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family. The Vatican released the guidelines – which are part of a broader training programme for newly named bishops – at a press conference earlier this month and is now seeking feedback.

It’s possible to read too much into these guidelines, but as a matter of public relations, it’s a disaster. If a bishop is made aware of a specific case involving clergy and the molestation of a child, urging the family to report the crime to police simply isn’t enough. That’s been the problem in the past – that the church basically looked away while predator priests were allowed to continue their attacks – usually in another parish. Pressure was placed on families by the church hierarchy to let the diocese handle the problem.

The guidelines suggest some sort of internal investigation before going to police. It appears that the Vatican is trying to strike some kind of balance between the rights of clergy not to be falsely accused and the rights of victims. On paper, that may be acceptable. But in practice, it still looks like a coverup – especially given recent history.

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

Ex-priest told a fellow priest about killing

ARIZONA/TEXAS
KRIS

[with video]

PHOENIX (AP) – The Latest on the arrest in Arizona of a former priest in the 1960 killing of a Texas schoolteacher (all times local):

4:10 p.m.

A man who told authorities that a former priest confessed to killing a Texas schoolteacher in 1960 says he’s relieved that the man has been charged in the case.

Former priest John Bernard Feit (fyt) was arrested Tuesday in Arizona after being indicted by a grand jury in Texas in the death of Irene Garza.

Dale Tacheny says he also is a former priest and was working at a Missouri monastery where Feit applied to live in 1963. Tacheny says Feit told him he’d killed a young woman as the two men talked during an evaluation process to determine whether Feit would be accepted to stay at the monastery.

Tacheny says he told a superior about the conversation, but the only result was that Fiet wasn’t invited to live at the monastery.

Tacheny says he continued thinking about the conversation over the years, but he didn’t learn until years later that the woman was Garza. Tacheny went to law enforcement in 2002.

Tacheny called Feit’s indictment “the right thing.”

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 arrested having sex with minors

ITALY
Vanguard

Rome, Italy – A priest, a junior football coach and an HIV-positive man were among 11 people arrested in northern Italy on charges of paying for sex with minors, police said Thursday.

The arrests in the Lombardy and Emilia-Romagna regions follow a six-month investigation led by detectives in Brescia into a prostitution network which used social media to put the minors in contact with potential clients.

The investigation was triggered after a mother found suspicious text messages on the phone of her 16-year-old daughter.

The accused priest was named by his diocese as Diego Rota, 45, a parish priest in the village of Solza near the city of Bergamo.

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.

Die Aufklärung der Missbrauchsfälle bei den Regensburger Domspatzen läuft

DEUTSCHLAND
Regensburger Nachrichten

[A victim of abuse at the Regensburg cathedral choir speaks about what happened there.]

Sie wurden geprügelt, sexuell missbraucht und gedemütigt. „Ich bin in die Finsternis gekommen. Es war ein Gefängnis mit Schlägen, Tritten und noch viel Schlimmerem“, erzählt Karsten G. (Name von der Redaktion geändert) von seinen traumatischen Erinnerungen an die Regensburger Domspatzen. Vor sechs Jahren wurden die ersten Missbrauchsfälle in dem berühmtesten Knabenchor Deutschlands bekannt, mittlerweile weiß man von mehr als 230 Fällen. Die Entschädigung? 2.500 Euro Schmerzensgeld, vielleicht – falls der Antrag vom Bistum nicht abgelehnt wird.

„Wenn die Erzieher, die sogenannten Präfekten, nachts ein Flüstern hörten, wurde man aus dem Bett geholt und in das Präfektenzimmer gebracht. Ich musste meinen Kopf zwischen seine Schenkel stecken. Bei jedem Schlag auf den Po rieb er sein Glied an meinem Hinterkopf.“ Karsten G. ist noch Jahrzehnte nach diesen Vorkommnissen schockiert, in seinen Augen stehen Tränen. „Es gab kein Entrinnen.“ Der 46-Jährige schwieg jahrelang, sprach mit niemandem darüber. Seit den 50er Jahren leben die Schüler in dem katholischen Internat der Regensburger Domspatzen, die Regeln waren streng. Erstmals 2010 brach der ehemalige Domspatz Alexander Probst das große Schweigen, er wollte eine Aufklärung und hoffte, damit endlich Frieden zu finden.

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.

Juan Carlos Cruz: La Iglesia Católica no hace nada concreto contra el abuso sexual

CHILE
Cooperativa

[Juan Carlos Cruz: The Catholic Church does nothing specifically against sexual abuse.]

Juan Carlos Cruz, denunciante del caso Karadima, relató en Lo que Queda del Día la expulsión del abogado Peter Saunders de la comisión vaticana que aborda los casos de abuso sexual, donde él mismo fue vetado de una reunión donde expondría el caso del obispo Juan Barros. Calificó como “una vergüenza y una burla” lo que está pasando.

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.

Public hearing into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

11 February, 2016

The Royal Commission will hold a public hearing commencing Monday 22 February 2016 at the Ballarat Magistrates Court.

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

The response of the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat and other Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat to allegations of child sexual abuse against clergy or religious.

The response of the Congregation of the Christian Brothers in St Patrick’s Province, Australia, to allegations of child sexual abuse against Christian Brothers.

Any related matters.

Cardinal George Pell will give evidence from 29 February 2016 by video link from Rome concerning Case Study 35: Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne and Case Study 28: Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat. The Royal Commission will sit in Sydney and, in accordance with a request from Cardinal Pell, the hearing will commence at 08:00am AEDT.

The Trench Room at Ballarat Town Hall will be made available for members of the community during the public hearing, including Cardinal Pell’s evidence.

For more information on Case Study 28 into the Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat please visit the Case Study 28 webpage

Date: Monday 22 February 2016
Time: 10.00am AEDT start
Location: Ballarat Magistrates Court, 100 Grenville St S, Ballarat VIC 3350

Any person or institution who believes that they have a direct and substantial interest in the scope and purpose of the public hearing is invited to lodge a written application for leave to appear at the public hearing by 15 February 2016.

Applications for leave to appear should be made using the form available on the Royal Commission website.

Parties who were granted leave to appear in the first or second part of the public hearing of Case Study 28 or Case Study 35 do not need to reapply.

Leave to appear will generally be granted when an applicant:

a. has been summoned to give evidence
b. is an institution, or is a representative of an institution, that is subject to the
inquiry to be undertaken
c. may be the subject of an adverse allegation.

It is not essential for a person who will appear as a witness in a hearing to apply for leave to appear – witnesses may appear and give evidence without applying for leave.

The form should be lodged with the Royal Commission via: Email: solicitor@childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au; or Mail: GPO Box 5283, Sydney NSW 2001

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

Public hearing into Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat

UNITED KINGDOM
ITV

The Bishop of Rochester – The Right Reverend James Langstaff – first announced the review of Kendall House in January last year.

He commissioned the independent panel on behalf of the dioceses of Rochester and Canterbury.

Former residents of the now-closed home say that they were heavily sedated with tranquilisers up to ten times the recommended dose.

The review will not however look at allegations that this led to birth defects in their own children.

The Bishop said the Church of England is not in a position to act as Judge and Jury in the absence of any birth defect related claims being made.

The Kendall House Review panel comprises of:

Sue Proctor led the major independent investigation into matters relating to Jimmy Savile, and chaired the NHS Savile Legacy Unit.

Samantha Cohen is a part time judge with some twenty years of experience as an independent barrister. She specialises in cases involving allegations of sexual abuse and

Ray Galloway retired from the police service in 2013 as a Detective Superintendent. Ray was the Director of the independent investigation into the activities of Jimmy Savile.

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

A BRIEF HISTORY OF ORANGE COUNTY’S SEX SCANDALS

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Weekly

BY GUSTAVO ARELLANO

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2016

People have compiled histories of baseball in Orange County, of our long-gone walnut growers, of films shot here before the advent of talking movies. Chronicles about the Huntington Beach Fourth of July parade, about the Hippie Mafia, about a guy’s visit to the Santa Ana Valley in the 1860s. Tomes devoted to old railroads, orange-crate labels, even Aliso Viejo, where nothing remarkable has ever happened—ever.

But nowhere in OC’s many history books will you find much info on our most unsung industry: sex scandals. Few other places in the U.S. can boast such a hypocritical mix of prudish mores and a libido that matches any Tushy.com ingénue, which usually translates to shocking, sometimes hilarious incidents that no proper history ever bothered to jot down. Thankfully, we ain’t proper, so consider us the Herodotus of smut—but you knew that already, right?

The following is just a sampling of all the nasty, disturbing, crazy, insane or just plain embarrassing sex scandals that Orange County has seen through the ages, ones that sent tongues clucking and authorities scrambling to cover up the dirty deeds. Special attention was given to incidents involving people abusing their positions of power. We mostly excluded hot-for-teacher cases (save the most infamous one) because that deserves a whole volume of the Encyclopedia Britannica. We’re a bit light on stuff before the 1980s, but we’ll keep digging. …

1975: The Orange County district attorney’s office (OCDA) tells the Archdiocese of Los Angeles to start psychological care for Eleuterio Ramos, a priest at St. Joseph Church in Placentia, citing “a recent incident.” Ramos would go on to become the most prolific pedophile priest in Orange County history, molesting at least 25 boys and never serving a day in jail.

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.

Francisco desaira a las víctimas de abusos sexuales de la Iglesia en su visita a México

MEXICO
NSS Oaxca

[Pope Francis rebuffs victims of sexual abuse in the church during his visit to Mexico.]

Fueron las palabras de Jesús Cabrero Romero, arzobispo de San Luis Potosí, las que dieron esperanza a las víctimas de abuso sexual de la Iglesia en México al asegurar que Francisco se reuniría con ellas como lo hizo en su visita a Estados Unidos, el año pasado. “El Papa traerá para ellos un mensaje y a nosotros una línea para poder responder a todas estas víctimas”, dijo el religioso en diciembre de 2015, cuando se organizaban los detalles de la primera visita de Francisco al país, que comienza este viernes. El Vaticano, sin embargo, ha revelado que no existirá tal encuentro. “Lo que hay que hacer es callar porque lo que han hecho aquí es proteger y encubrir”, señala la madre de un joven violado por el sacerdote Eduardo Córdova, uno de los mayores depredadores sexuales de la Iglesia en México.

El desaire de Francisco ha sido mal recibido en San Luis Potosí, a 350 kilómetros de la Ciudad de México. La capital del Estado de 2.4 millones de habitantes sufrió las vejaciones del padre Córdova. En abril de 2004, la madre de una de sus víctimas envió una carta al arzobispo Luis Morales. “Mi hijo fue violado en su persona, en su vida, en su respeto, en su integridad y sobre todo, en su fe”, escribió. “¿Cómo un sacerdote puede llegar a hacer tanto daño?” A esa carta siguieron varias más, de otros afectados, hasta noviembre de 2006. El arzobispo respondió que la información había sido enviada a Roma el 29 de junio de 2004 para pedir “indicaciones a seguir en el caso”.

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.

‘No prospect’ of justice from child abuse inquiry

SCOTLAND
Scotsman

CHRIS MARSHALL

Survivors of historical child abuse have “no prospect” of obtaining justice from a national inquiry unless its remit is widened, it has been claimed.

Campaigners will meet education secretary Angela Constance tomorrow to press for the scope of the inquiry to be widened to include paedophile priests who abused children outwith residential care.

The inquiry, which officially opened in October under the leadership of Susan O’Brien QC, is investigating the physical and sexual abuse of children in care up until December 2014.

But survivors’ groups have complained that by focussing on the abuse of children in care, the scope of the inquiry is not wide enough and will exclude those abused by members of the Catholic Church.

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

Collins did not vote for Saunders suspension

IRELAND
The Irish Catholic

By Greg Daly
February 11, 2016

Marie Collins, the Irish clerical abuse survivor who has been a member of Pope Francis’ child protection advisory panel since its foundation, has said she did not vote for the suspension of her colleague and fellow survivor Peter Saunders.

Following a February 6 discussion about the “direction and purpose” of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors “it was decided that Mr Peter Saunders would take a leave of absence from his membership to consider how he might best support the commission’s work”, according to a statement.

Mr Saunders, founder of the UK-based National Association for People Abused in Childhood, said 15 committee members voted for his suspension, with one member being absent and another abstaining. Asked on Twitter whether she had voted for Mr Saunders’ suspension, Mrs Collins said she had not done so.

In a later statement, Mr Saunders, who has been outspoken on individual cases including allegations about Chile’s Bishop Juan Barros and Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell, said concerns had been raised about his speaking too much to the press and seeing himself as a campaigner. He insisted that he has not, however, left the panel, saying “I was appointed by Pope Francis, and I will only talk to him about my position on the commission”.

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.

MÉXICO TIENE LOS PEDERASTAS MÁS CRUELES DE LA IGLESIA: ATHIÉ

MEXICO
Sin Embargo

[Former priest Alberto Athie Gallo, a former priest of the Archdiocese of Mexico, continues to fight against pedophilia in the Catholic Church which he has been doing since 1994 when a victim of the founder of the Legionaries of Christ – Marcial Maciel Degollado – told her story. In his opinion Mexico has the most curel pedophile church. In Mexico more than 500 cases of children raped by Catholic priests are known to date and there is a suspected cover-up involving the church and the Mexican justice system.]

Por Shaila Rosagel febrero 11, 2016

Ciudad de México a 11 de febrero (SinEmbargo).- Alberto Athié Gallo, ex sacerdote de la Arquidiócesis de México, no deja de luchar en contra de la pederastia en la Iglesia Católica desde 1994, cuando una víctima del fundador de los Legionarios de Cristo, Marcial Maciel Degollado, le contó su historia.

Rechazó ser Obispo a cambio de callarse y sorteó las presiones que, asegura, tuvo del Arzobispo Primado de México Norberto Rivera Carrera.

Exiliado en Estados Unidos, vivió de cerca el escándalo de los sacerdotes pederastas de Boston, Massachusetts, y el encubrimiento de la cúpula de la Iglesia Católica en esa zona. Luego de mucho andar y de conocer casos a nivel mundial, asegura en entrevista con SinEmbargo que México tiene a los pederastas más crueles e importantes de la Iglesia. Todos impunes y libres, “gracias a un mecanismo protector, diseñado desde la Santa Sede, que les permite encontrar en el clero, el lugar perfecto para violar niños”.

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.

Paedophilia cases mar pope’s Mexico trip

MEXICO
IOL

By: Michael Day

Rome – Pope Francis begins a high-profile visit to Latin America on Friday in what should be a series of celebrations for the Argentinian pontiff.

Attention instead looks set to be fixed again on arguably the single most shocking case of multiple child abuse, cover-ups and conspiracy in a series of worldwide clerical paedophilia cases.

Even before Francis touches down in Mexico city, victims of serial abuser Marcial Maciel, the close friend of Pope John Paul II, and head of the Legionaries of Christ, are dismayed that Pope Francis will not find time to meet them despite him spending a whole week in Mexico.

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Ex-priest baffled by arrest in 1960 McAllen schoolteacher slaying

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

McALLEN — For more than half a century, the unsolved killing of a young schoolteacher and beauty queen who was last seen at church haunted this South Texas city.

But now, nearly 56 years after the bludgeoned body of 25-year-old Irene Garza was pulled from an irrigation canal, police have arrested the man long suspected in her slaying: the priest who apparently heard her final confession.

Using a walker, a frail-looking John Bernard Feit, 83, appeared in court Wednesday in Phoenix after being arrested a day earlier at his home in Scottsdale, Ariz., on a murder charge. He was jailed on $750,000 bail while he awaits transfer back to Texas.

“This whole thing makes no sense to me because the crime in question took place in 1960,” Feit said, adding that he plans to fight extradition to Texas.

Feit’s arrest followed other investigations over the years, including a grand jury probe in 2004 that concluded there was insufficient evidence to charge him.

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Worst-kept secret: Ex-priest’s connection to Texas murder investigation

ARIZONA/TEXAS
Arizona Republic

[with video]

Megan Cassidy and Garrett Mitchell, The Republic

A connection to a slain beauty queen was John Feit’s worst-kept secret in the decade leading up to his arrest.

The 1960 killing of Irene Garza, a young schoolteacher, continued to dog the otherwise quiet life of Feit, an elderly Scottsdale resident and former priest known for helping the poor and the homeless in metro Phoenix for more than a quarter-century.

Since nearly a lifetime ago, Feit, 83, had been the sole occupant on detectives’ list of suspects, although he never had been arrested or charged.

Garza’s grisly slaying in the Rio Grande Valley in the southern tip of Texas inspired national crime documentaries and haunted investigators. It served as a political platform for the recent campaign of Hidalgo County Prosecutor Ricardo Rodriguez, who was asked by Garza’s family to examine the case once again.

No charges were brought after the initial investigation in 1960, conducted after Garza was found face down in an irrigation canal, five days after she was last seen heading to confession at a Catholic Church where Feit was a priest. A grand jury re-examined the case in 2004 but did not indict him. Last week, another grand jury did.

In a brief and unexpected 2014 interview with “48 Hours’ “Richard Schlesinger, Feit expressed disgust with the allegations. For the umpteenth time, Feit denied killing Garza.

“Get lost, brother!” he snarled, before slamming the door in the reporter’s face.

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Bishop denies WA child sex abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

AAP

The former head of the Catholic Church’s defence force diocese has denied he inappropriately touched boys and has blamed another priest and a brother for assaults at a college more than 40 years ago.

Bishop Max Leroy Davis is charged with six counts of being grossly indecent with five boys under the age of 15 between 1969 and 1972 at St Benedict’s College in New Norcia, northeast of Perth.

Davis, 70, testified in the West Australian District Court on Thursday that he never thought of children sexually or committed a child sex offence, describing it as wrong and inappropriate.

Defence counsel Seamus Rafferty has previously suggested two alternative suspects, who are now dead, including a Father Justin, who Davis had a role in removing as rector.

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Catholic Bishop of Australian Defence Force Max Davis tells Perth court he did not abuse boys

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Joanna Menagh

The Catholic Bishop of the Australian Defence Force has taken the stand and denied, under oath, that he ever sexually abused teenage boys 45 years ago.

Max Davis, 70, was on trial in Perth accused of abusing five boarders when he was a dormitory master at Saint Benedict’s College at New Norcia, north of Perth, between 1969 and 1972.

Davis, who voluntarily stood aside from his role as Catholic Bishop of the ADF when he was charged, was a teacher and dormitory master at the school and it is alleged he molested the boys on five separate occasions when they were aged about 13 or 14.

In his evidence Davis said he had no “independent recollection” of any of the complainants, and repeatedly denied that he had ever abused any of them.

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Church left in the dark over paedophile priest Peter Grasby’s Asian relocation

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

February 10, 2016

Nino Bucci
Crime reporter for The Age

The Archdiocese of Melbourne did not know a paedophile priest, who the church had put on paid leave, had left Australia.

The Age revealed on Wednesday that Father Peter Grasby, who was put on administrative leave in 2012, had left Melbourne for Malaysia and was seeking the company of “younger Asian men” using gay dating websites.

The church confirmed that the complaint against Father Grasby, which related to abuse at St Joseph’s in West Brunswick against a boy aged as young as 10, had been upheld in 2013.

The church said the complaint had also been referred to police, despite saying at the time that the victim had declined to report to the force.

Father Grasby was assistant priest at the time of the sexual abuse, which started in the late 1970s and may have continued until the early 1980s.

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7th lawsuit filed over abuse by sexual predator teacher Matthew Graziotti

FLORIDA
News-Journal

By Frank Fernandez
frank.fernandez@news-jrnl.com
Published: Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Edgewater Alliance Church and Warner Christian Academy were negligent in their hiring and supervision of Matthew Graziotti, according to the latest lawsuit filed in the case of the former teacher and summer camp director convicted for sexually preying on young boys.

The suit was filed Monday in Circuit Court by the parent of a child identified only as John Doe who lives in Volusia County. The family is represented by Morgan and Morgan, and one of the firm’s attorneys working on the case is Belvin Perry Jr., the judge who presided over the Casey Anthony case and retired from the bench in 2014.

Graziotti was sentenced on Jan. 26, 2015, to 210 years in federal prison. A federal prosecutor described him as a “skilled sexual predator” and said Graziotti sexually abused 29 children under the age of 12, some as young as 6.

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Doctors offer to get Cardinal George Pell back to the Royal Commission safe and sound

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 11, 2016

Liam Mannix
Reporter

Call them the ‘Physicians for the comfort of George Pell’.

Dr Richard Sallie, a West Australian doctor, has been taking volunteers for a small medical team.
Their offer: a praetorian guard of personal physicians who could safely see Cardinal George Pell through the flight from Rome to appear before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Cardinal Pell, 74, has been granted permission by the Commission to appear by video link in lieu of a personal appearance, because he is too sick to fly.

In a letter published in Fairfax Media newspapers Dr Sallie offered his expertise to help the Cardinal get home.

Reached in Western Australia, Dr Sallie admitted he was something of a veteran newspaper letter writer – his own mother even receives death threats, presumably meant for him, from time to time.

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Apologies are not enough from Church – it must protect us

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

Jean Calder / Wednesday 10 February 2016

I’VE been saddened to see so many people rush to defend the reputation of Bishop George Bell – and by implication suggest the elderly woman who accused him of child sexual abuse is a liar.

The Church of England has accepted that the abuse took place and given its previous determination to keep abuse by its clergy under wraps, I suspect the evidence is compelling. I was pleased that Bishop Martin Warner apologised and defended the alleged victim from criticism.

In respect of prominent abusers, the modern Church of England has done better than the Church of Rome. Eric Gill, the famous artist and Roman Catholic adult convert was the son of a Church of England clergyman, also from Chichester.

Over many years, Gill sexually abused his sisters, servants and then his daughters, socially isolating the girls while using them as models for semi-erotic religious art. The abuse is catalogued in his own diaries but if you visit the Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral, where his famous Stations of the Cross take pride of place and are publicised in the cathedral shop, there’s no mention of his history or his victims’ exploitation.

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One in Four shocked at Vatican document on reporting abuse

IRELAND
Irish Times

The One in Four organisation has expressed shock at the implications of a new Vatican document on the reporting of claims of clerical abuse.

Maeve Lewis, executive director of One in Four, said she was shocked at the implication that bishops had discretion whether or not to report incidents of clerical abuse to the civil authorities.

She was speaking on the recently released the guidelines in a Vatican document for new bishops which states it is “not necessarily” their duty to report claims of clerical abuse in states where reporting was obligatory.

The guidelines did state that clergy must be aware of laws in the area they minister.

She told Newstalk Radio: “Given the history in this country we all know the dangers and what sort of culture that can create and the dangers to vulnerable children. It must be unbelievable to people like Bishop Diarmuid Martin who showed such leadership on this issue in this country.

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Catholic Church Tells Bishops They Are Not Obliged to Disclose Child Sex Abuse: Report

VATICAN CITY
Time

Rishi Iyengar @Iyengarish

Report says the church has told prelates that decision should be made by the victims and their families

The Catholic Church is allegedly telling newly ordained bishops that they have no obligation to report child-sexual-abuse allegations to law-enforcement officials, saying instead that the decision to take such claims to the authorities should be left to victims and their families.

The policy was first reported by a veteran Vatican journalist at Catholic news website Crux, who cited a presentation given by French Monsignor Tony Anatrella.

Anatrella, a consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family and the Pontifical Council for Health Care Workers, also authored a training document for new bishops released by Church authorities last week, in which similar guidelines are laid out.

“According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds,” his document states, according to a citation in the Guardian.

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Catholic Church tells Bishops they don’t have to report child abuse to police

VATICAN CITY
TIMES Live (South Africa)

AFP

The Vatican is telling its newly appointed bishops that they do “not necessarily” have a duty to report their child abusing priests to the police according to a report.

“According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds,” a Vatican training document for new bishops reads, according to The Guardian.

Pope Francis has previously said, “everything possible must be done to rid the church of the scourge of the sexual abuse”.

The guidelines were written by Tony Anatrella. a controversial French monsignor and psychotherapist views who serves as a consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family.

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Jurors can punish archdiocese for mishandling McCormack case

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

WRITTEN BY MITCH DUDEK POSTED: 02/10/2016

A Cook County judge has ruled a victim who says he was abused by former Catholic priest Daniel McCormack will be able to seek punitive damages against the Chicago Archdiocese at trial — opening the door for other victims to do the same and effectively offering jurors the opportunity to punish the archdiocese for its oversight of the now-infamous child molester.

Judge Clare McWilliams signed off on punitive damages after deciding it was reasonably likely that plaintiff attorneys would be able to prove to a jury that McCormack’s previous misconduct as a seminarian were known to officials and the archdiocese acted in “utter disregard” in their “hiring, supervision and retention” of McCormack.

It was revealed at a court hearing last week that as an undergraduate at Niles College, McCormack allegedly sexually molested a drunken seminarian who had passed out. Another seminarian, who had also passed out after drinking, woke up to find McCormack putting his hands down his pants three different times. The alleged assaults were reported to a school counselor who stayed silent about the matter, Eugene Hollander, the attorney who represents the victim, said at the hearing.

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Jailed Philadelphia church official wins appeal of guilt

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS | Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2016

PHILADELPHIA — A Roman Catholic church official could soon seek bail after a Pennsylvania appeals court refused to review a decision to throw out his child-endangerment conviction.

Monsignor William Lynn has been in and out of prison as state appeals courts have split on the validity of his 2012 conviction.

Lynn, 65, is the first U.S. church supervisor ever arrested over his role in the alleged cover-up of priest sexual abuse.

A Philadelphia jury found in 2012 that he endangered an altar boy by sending a known pedophile priest to the boy’s parish in the late 1990s. The priest was at the top of a list of known or suspected predators that Lynn prepared while he was secretary for clergy at the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, a post he held from 1992 to 2004.

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Pennsylvania: Jailed Church Official May Seek Bail

PENNSYLVANIA
New York Times

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FEB. 10, 2016

A Roman Catholic church official could soon seek bail after a Pennsylvania appeals court refused to review a decision to throw out his child-endangerment conviction. The official, Msgr. William Lynn, has been in and out of prison as state appeals courts have split on the validity of his 2012 conviction. He is the first United States church supervisor ever arrested over his role in the suspected cover-up of sexual abuse by priests.

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Diocese Responds to Former Priest’s Arrest

TEXAS
KRGV

[with video]

BROWNSVILLE – A former priest, suspected in the murder of a second grade teacher decades ago, was volunteering at Sacred Heart Church in McAllen at the time.

The church is now part of the Catholic Diocese of Brownsville.

The relations director at the diocese said when a criminal case is presented with the church their duty is to immediately report it to the authorities.

Currently they do not have an open investigation concerning Irene Garza’s case. They sent CHANNEL 5 NEWS the following statement regarding the case:

“We hope and pray for healing for the family and everyone involved. It is our hope that justice is served in this case that dates back to 1960.”

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Aussie church says will report priest accused of abuse for moving to Kuching

AUSTRALIA/MALAYSIA
Malay Online

KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 11 ― A priest under investigation for child molest in Australia will be reported to his home country’s authorities for moving to Kuching, Sarawak without authorisation, the Catholic Church there said.

The Catholic Church’s Archdiocese of Melbourne said Father Peter Grasby had breached its 2013 instructions to remain in Australia when he shifted to Malaysia, where he is allegedly seeking “young Asian men”, without its knowledge.

“As Father Grasby did not inform the Archdiocese of his move to Malaysia contrary to the conditions imposed on him in August 2013, Archbishop Hart will now refer the matter to the Independent Commissioner for his consideration and recommendation,” the archdiocese’s spokesman was quoted saying in Australian daily The Age’s report last night.

The spokesman said Melbourne Archbishop Dennis Hart had previously rejected Grasby’s August 2013 request to move out from Australia.

“Archbishop Hart emphasised the need to know his whereabouts and that if he chose to leave Australia without permission, further advice would be sought from the Independent Commissioner regarding his situation,” the spokesman said.

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Catholic Bishop Max Davis responds to ‘horrifying’ child sexual abuse allegations in video

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Joanna Menagh

A Perth court has heard a Catholic Bishop tell police he found it “distressing” and “horrifying” to have been accused of child sexual abuse dating back more than 45 years.

Max Davis, most recently the Catholic Bishop of the Australian Defence Force (ADF), made the comments when he was being interviewed by detectives three years ago about an allegation he abused a boarding student, 13, at Saint Benedict’s College in New Norcia in 1969.

A recording of the police interview was played to the District Court on Wednesday, where Mr Davis is on trial accused of abusing the boy and four others when he was a teacher and dormitory master at the school from 1969 and 1972.

At the time of the interview, in April 2013, police had received a complaint from only one former student alleging he was sexually abused after going to see Mr Davis about a sex education class he had given.

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Abuse inquiry to sit earlier after request from George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Shannon Deery
Herald Sun

THE child abuse royal commission has announced it will sit early to accommodate a request from Cardinal George Pell.

The Cardinal is expected to give evidence from the Vatican over three days from February 29.

He was expected to attend the hearings in person but was this week successful in an application to testify to via videolink because of ill health.

The decision was made by commission chair Justice Peter McClellan who said he would have preferred for Pell to return to Australia for the hearings.

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Church pays for abuse

CONNECTICUT
Republican-Amercan

BY PAUL SINGLEY REPUBLICAN-AMERICAN

The Achdiocese of Hartford has agreed to pay $500,000 to settle sexual abuse allegations against a Roman Catholic priest who served at parishes in the Naugatuck Valley.

The settlement was reached two weeks before the case was to go to trial.

William Dotson, now 39, filed allegations of sexual abuse against the Rev. Stephen Bzdyra that stemmed from when Dotson served as an altar boy between 1985 and 1990, when Bzdyra was a priest.

Dotson, one of at least three people to file sexual abuse claims against Bzdyra, said the priest forced him to perform multiple sexual acts when he was an altar boy between 1985 and 1990 at St. Hedwig in Naugatuck, St. Francis in New Haven, and at a house in New Haven that Bzdyra owned.

Dotson’s New Haven-based attorney Joel T. Faxon said the church removed Bzdyra from the priesthood when the lawsuit was filed.

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Report: Australian priest in Kuching to look for ‘young Asian men’

MALAYSIA
The Star

BY P. DIVAKARAN

PETALING JAYA: A priest from Melbourne who is accused of child sexual abuse is reported to have moved to Malaysia to look for “young Asian men” while on paid leave.

The Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) said Wednesday that Father Peter Grasby had allegedly moved from Australia to Kuching, and was seeking the company of young men on a gay dating website.

The report said that Grasby’s profile on website Planetromeo showed that the 66-year-old “happens to like younger Asian men” aged between 18 and 35.

The profile, which has been visited 7,907 times, also listed details about his sexual preferences, and that he was “well-educated and really soft hearted mature GWM (gay-white male)”, said the report.

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Malaysian officials vow to deport Melbourne paedophile priest Peter Grasby who fled on paid leave

MALAYSIA/AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 11, 2016

Nino Bucci
Crime reporter for The Age

Malaysian immigration officials have vowed to deport a paedophile priest who fled Melbourne last month despite being warned by the Archbishop it was against the conditions of his paid leave.

It was revealed on Tuesday that Father Peter Grasby, who the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne found had abused a boy aged as young as 10, had travelled to Kuching while on administrative leave, and had been using gay dating websites to seek the company of “younger Asian men”.

The archdiocese confirmed late Wednesday that they did not know Father Grasby had left the country until they had read The Age report.

Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart had explicitly told Father Grasby he was not to move overseas in August, 2013, a spokesman for the archdiocese said, and has written to him since the report directing his “immediate return”.

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The Pope in Mexico: More Harm Than Good?

MEXICO
Counterpunch

by JOHN HAZARD

Pope Francisco comes to Mexico for the first time this week. Will it be a “Meet the new boss—same as the old boss” experience? In the 1980s, John Paul II shamelessly performed a private mass for the family of then-president José Luis Portillo. (“Mexico deserves a mass in the presidential residence,” was that pope’s logic.) The current pope comes with a more populist stance, but, according to Vatican spokesperson Federico Lombardi, refuses to meet with parents of the 43 disappeared education students—as he has avoided doing since a group of mothers went to see him in Philadelphia in September—or with victims of pederast priests. In both cases, church authorities offer tickets to the mass the pope will officiate in Ciudad Juárez, which is about a 30-hour drive from the state of Guerrero.

Epifanio Álvarez, father of one of the missing students, responded that if the pope “were really different and wanted to do something for us, he would have made some kind of statement a long time ago.” Whether seeking papal intervention is the best strategy to fight state violence in Mexico is open to debate, but what cannot be disputed is that this pope has scheduled time to meet the family of the neo-liberal mayor of Mexico City—Miguel Ángel Mancera, friend of violent police officials and of real estate vultures who send thousands of poor people per year to live on the streets or to leave the city—but not to meet with families of the worst state-committed atrocity in Mexico’s recent history. (Alexandro Solalinde, a priest who is widely respected for his defense of Central American immigrants who pass through Mexico, believes that, in spite of the announcements to the contrary, the pope will meet with the families of the 43 students.)

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Tracing the Bishops’ Culpability in the Child Abuse Scandal

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

EDITORIAL BOARD

FEB. 11, 2016

Pope Francis’ commission on the clergy’s sexual violation of children had a timely private screening in Rome last week of “Spotlight,” the Oscar-nominated film about the pedophilia scandal in Boston. The film offers the Vatican, if it will listen, an emphatic lesson in accountability. It dramatizes the decision by The Boston Globe to do more than enumerate the scope of the scandal by reporting on cases involving scores of abusive priests. The scandal was tracked up the church hierarchy to Cardinal Bernard Law, who eventually had to resign his leadership when the news media, not the church, documented his role as a protector of abusive priests.

Hierarchical accountability remains a pressing issue that the Vatican has not fully confronted in the numerous dioceses of the world where the scandal was suppressed. The pope’s 17-member commission presented fresh evidence of this failing when one of its two abuse-victim members, who had gone to the news media to criticize the slow pace of its work, was suddenly suspended on Saturday in a commission vote of no confidence.

To its credit, the commission, stressing it was only a policy body, had previously urged the pope to create a separate tribunal to judge bishops accused of shielding abusive priests. But Peter Saunders, the suspended commission member, and other abuse victims complained that there has been no progress since the tribunal’s creation last June. They were incensed as well over the pope’s appointment last year of a new diocesan leader in Chile, Bishop Juan Barros, a close associate of a Santiago priest the Vatican found guilty of child abuse in 2011. The pope nevertheless defended the bishop and was seen on a video complaining that protesters were “lefties” and “dumb.”

Mr. Saunders may have become an impatient and annoying dissident on a commission charged with developing advisory solutions for the problem, but he has a valid point that Pope Francis cannot afford to ignore. Regaining credibility among the church laity requires clear and timely investigation and punishment of prelates who covered up the rape of children with hush money and rotated abusers to new parishes to commit fresh crimes. “There must be consequences” for offensive church leaders, the laity panel appointed by the United States hierarchy warned over a decade ago.

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Indian bishop lifts convicted priest’s suspension

INDIA
UCA News

ucanews.com reporter, Kochi, India February 11, 2016

A Catholic bishop in southern India has lifted the suspension of a priest convicted last year of sexually abusing a 16-year-old girl in the United States.

The 2010 suspension order imposed on Father Joseph Palanivel Jeyapaul, 61, was lifted on Jan. 16 after consultations with the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Bishop Arulappan Amalraj of Ootacamund told ucanews.com Feb. 9.

“It was not a personal decision, but was done after extensive consultation and under the guidance of competent authorities,” Bishop Amalraj said.

Father Jeyapaul, posted to Crookston Diocese in Minnesota for parish work in 2004, returned home within a year following allegations of sexual abuse.

Interpol arrested him in 2012 to face charges in the U.S. of sexually abusing two girls while serving Crookston Diocese.

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Sarawak immigration looking into status of priest accused of abuse

MALAYSIA
The Star

BY SHARON LING

KUCHING: Sarawak’s immigration authorities are looking into news reports that a priest from Melbourne accused of child sexual abuse has moved to the state capital while on paid leave.

Incoming immigration director Ken Leben said the department was checking to see if Father Peter Grasby had entered the state.

“I have instructed my deputy to check (his) status,” he told The Star when contacted on Thursday.

Asked whether Grasby would be deported if found to be in Kuching, Ken said he would have to study the matter first.

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February 10, 2016

EX-CHICAGOAN AND FORMER PRIEST CHARGED IN 1960 SLAYING OF TEXAS BEAUTY QUEEN

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

By Chuck Goudie

CHICAGO (WLS) — An ex-Chicagoan and former Roman Catholic priest is now charged with killing a beauty queen in 1960, right after he heard her confession.

John Feit is a native South Sider who still speaks with an Irish-tinged accent. He became a Catholic priest and in 1960 was visiting a parish in McAllen, Texas, where he helping out on a busy Easter weekend when Irene Garza, 25, came in for confession. That was the last time she was seen alive.

Fifty-six years later, the former priest is charged with her murder. Feit appeared in court Wednesday in Phoenix, where he had been living and was arrested.

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Plea deal in works for Greek Orthodox priest charged with theft

ILLINOIS/WISCONSIN
Chicago Tribune

John KeilmanContact Reporter
Chicago Tribune

A Greek Orthodox priest charged with stealing more than $110,000 from a church trust fund has reached a tentative plea deal with prosecutors, authorities said Wednesday.

The Rev. James Dokos, who lives in Chicago, is accused of taking the money from a $1.2 million fund he controlled at Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church in Milwaukee and spending it on himself, family members and other church officials.

The Milwaukee County district attorney’s office charged Dokos with theft in 2014, two years after he had left Annunciation to become head of Sts. Peter and Paul Greek Orthodox Church in Glenview.

The suggested plea deal will be brought before a judge Feb. 22, a day before Dokos’ trial was due to start. Prosecutor David Robles said he could not discuss the deal’s particulars, and Dokos declined to comment. The priest’s attorneys did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

The church placed Dokos on unpaid leave following the criminal charge. His lawyers last year unsuccessfully tried to argue that the case was a violation of religious freedom, casting it as a dispute over the use of church property.

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La Iglesia de SLP se excusa de curas pederastas: no tenemos culpa de que estén libres, dice

SAN LUIS POTOSí (MEXICO)
Sinembargo.mx [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 10, 2016

By Ruben Pacheco

Read original article

El vocero de la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí dijo que la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado (PGJE) es “testigo” de la cooperación de la Arquidiócesis potosina, encabezada por Jesús Carlos Cabrero Romero, porque, aseguró, han brindado las informaciones pertinentes.

Ciudad de México, 19 de febrero (SinEmbargo/Pulso).– Juan Jesús Priego Rivera, vocero de la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí, dijo que esa institución no es culpable de que curas acusados de abusar de menores sean prófugos de la justicia potosina, como es el caso de Eduardo Córdova Bautista y Noé Trujillo.

“Nosotros sentimos una cierta presión porque nosotros hemos hecho lo que se tiene hacer. No somos culpables de que tal o cual persona se encuentre en libertad, puesto que estará viviendo un proceso de ley. Entonces la Ley tiene recursos que prevé para la procuración de justicia”, comentó al diario Pulso.

Al ser cuestionado sobre si la Iglesia tiene responsabilidad de que no se hayan encontrado a los curas acusados de ilícitos, el vocero de la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí dijo que el Arzobispado ha promovido las demandas donde se hace referencia a delitos presuntamente cometidos por sacerdotes.

Priego Rivera dijo que la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado (PGJE) es “testigo” de la cooperación de la Arquidiócesis potosina, encabezada por Jesús Carlos Cabrero Romero, porque, aseguró, han brindado las informaciones pertinentes.

Sobre si la Iglesia de San Luis Potosí entregó información de las ubicaciones y domicilios de los imputados, el portavoz católico aseveró que entregaron “todo” a la PGJE, según lo estipulado en la Ley, que establece que el clero deberá denunciar cualquier presunto delito de sus ministros religiosos.

Como lo ha expuesto en otras ocasiones, Priego Rivera reiteró que la diócesis de San Luis Potosí “no tolera ni va a tolerar” ningún caso de abuso sexual de presbíteros contra menores de edad.

Hasta el momento suman siete las averiguaciones previas en San Luis Potosí contra sacerdotes católicos presuntamente por cometer abusos sexuales, de acuerdo con la Procuraduría. En dos casos los implicados fueron detenidos y luego liberados sin sentencia condenatoria, en uno se negó la orden de aprehensión y dos más se encuentran en calidad de prófugos, pero con órdenes de captura, es el caso de Noé Trujillo y Eduardo Córdova Bautista.

En días pasados la Procuraduría de San Luis Potosí integró dos nuevas averiguaciones previas por casos de abusos sexuales cometidos presuntamente por sacerdotes. Así lo reveló el Procurador estatal, Federico Garza Herrera, quien precisó que los hechos habrían ocurrido en los municipios de San Ciro de Acosta y Rioverde.

Las denuncias se presentaron durante 2015 por la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí y están en proceso de integración, recabando declaraciones de víctimas y otros testimonios, así como pruebas periciales, con miras a consignar el caso a un juez penal y solicitar las respectivas órdenes de aprehensión.

En entrevista con Pulso, el titular de la PGJE declinó en días pasados profundizar en la información, sin embargo, dio a conocer que uno de los implicados se identifica como Noé Francisco, quien incluso fue suspendido de manera precautoria por la Arquidiócesis.

De lo relacionado al sacerdote de San Ciro de Acosta, no se proporcionó tampoco la fecha en que se inició el expediente, sólo se informó que fue durante el año pasado y que al igual que en otros ya conocidos, la víctima fue un menor de edad.

Ambos casos se investigan a través de la Fiscalía de Delitos de Alto Impacto de la PGJE, según indicó Federico Garza Herrera.

La Procuraduría de San Luis Potosí ha dado a conocer que la Fiscalía Especial para los Delitos de Violencia Contra las Mujeres y Trata de Personas (Fevimtra) integra una averiguación previa en contra de Eduardo Córdova, pero tampoco esa se ha consignado ante un juez.

El ex sacerdote Alberto Athié Gallo denunció el caso el padre Eduardo Córdova Bautista de San Luis Potosí, implicado en al menos 100 casos de abuso sexual en esa entidad en 2014.

“Tiene 30 años con estas actividades, hay muchos papás y mamás, muy dolidos y molestos y no han visto que se haga justicia para sus hijos. Este caso se sabía en la Arquidiócesis desde hace mucho tiempo y nunca hicieron nada para entregarlo a las autoridades civiles a pesar de que hay denuncias penales detenidas en los ministerios públicos”, dijo.

El sacerdote fue removido de sus cargos por órdenes de la Santa Sede que lo investigó y determinó su culpabilidad, sin embargo siguió oficiando misas en un asilo de ancianos en total libertad, burlando a la justicia mexicana, indicó.

Después, ese año se convirtió en un prófugo de la justicia, luego de que los padres de un adolescente, acompañados por Luis Nava Calvillo, decidieron en 2014 llevar la denuncia no ante la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado (PGJEM), cuyo titular era entonces Miguel Ángel García Covarrubias, sino ante la Fiscalía Especial para los Delitos de Violencia Contra las Mujeres y Trata de Personas (Fevimtra) dependiente de la Procuraduría General de la República (PGR).

En los hechos tampoco ha habido mucha diferencia, no se tiene noticia de que la averiguación previa haya sido consignada ante un juez, además la integración del expediente se ha visto afectada en su avance por cambios de funcionarios en la PGR.

La Iglesia Católica dice no saber el paradero de Eduardo Córdova, mientras que las víctimas creen que el pederasta fue encubierto por las autoridades religiosas.

-Con información de Leonardo Vázquez, de Pulso

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Hartford Archdiocese To Pay Former Altar Boy $500,000 To Settle Priest Abuse Case, Law Firm Says

CONNECTICUT
Hartford Courant

Dave Altimari

The Hartford Archdiocese has agreed to pay a former altar boy at a New Haven church $500,000 to settle a lawsuit alleging former priest Stephen Bzdyra molested the boy over a three-year period in the 1980s.

The case was scheduled to go to trial next month, but on Wednesday New Haven attorney Joel Faxon announced that his client, William Dotson, had settled the case for $500,000. Unlike many lawsuits against the church where the plaintiff uses a pseudonym, Dotson allowed his name to be public.

“The plaintiff’s position has always been that the Diocese should have taken action to eliminate Bzdyra’s ongoing and serious threat to children within the Diocese — especially to our client William Dotson, who Bzdyra repeatedly sexually abused over the course of several years,” said Timothy P. Pothin, an attorney with Faxon Law Group in New Haven.

The lawsuit, initially filed in 2010, alleged that while Dotson was an altar boy at St. Francis Church in New Haven in the 1980s, Bzdyra molested him repeatedly in the church rectory. The lawsuit also accused Bzdyra of paying Dotson hush money, including buying him a car and a new washer and dryer.

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Met Police handling of child abuse claims to be reviewed by judge

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A former High Court judge is to review the Metropolitan Police’s handling of cases involving claims of historical child abuse by public figures.

Met commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe has asked Sir Richard Henriques to make recommendations about whether there are ways to improve procedures.

The Operation Midland inquiry into a 1970s and 1980s paedophile ring is among inquiries that will be examined.

The force has come under fire amid claims it over-reacted to allegations.

Former head of the Army Lord Bramall, 92, who last month found out he would not face any further action in connection with Operation Midland, had called for a review.

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The Latest: Ex-priest worked at Catholic charity in Phoenix

ARIZONA
Houston Chronicle

PHOENIX (AP) — The Latest on the arrest in Arizona of a former priest in the 1960 cold-case killing of a Texas schoolteacher (all times local):

3:15 p.m.

The former priest arrested in the 1960 death of a Texas schoolteacher worked as a volunteer and administrator for many years at a Phoenix charity.

St. Vincent de Paul executive director Steve Zabilski said John Feit (fyt) was an employee at the Catholic charity up until about a decade ago. He later worked as a volunteer.

Zabliski said Feit worked with and trained volunteers in the charity’s many food pantries around the Phoenix area.

He said the charity knew about Feit being under suspicion in the death of Irene Garza, but continued to work there because he was never charged and denied involvement. Zabliski called Feit a kind, caring and compassionate employee, and said he was stunned about the news.
___

12:50 p.m.

A former priest accused in the 1960 killing of a Texas schoolteacher says he’ll fight extradition to the state following his arrest in Arizona.

John Bernard Feit (fyt) appeared in court on Wednesday in Phoenix, a day after he was arrested at his home in Scottsdale, Arizona, on a murder warrant from Texas’ Hidalgo County in the death of Irene Garza.

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Bishop Seeks Forgiveness For Church’s Failings

MASSACHUSETTS
WAMC

[with audio]

By PAUL TUTHILL

The spiritual leader of Roman Catholics in western Massachusetts offered a broad apology today to people wounded by the clergy sex abuse scandal, to those embittered by church closings, and to people who were alienated from the church over racial and cultural differences or sexual orientation.

In a 2,300 word pastoral letter released on Ash Wednesday, Springfield Bishop Mitchell Rozanski asked forgiveness for “ our past failings as a diocese” and the “ grievous actions” of some who ministered in the church. He called on priests and lay leaders to be proactive in efforts to get lapsed Catholics to return, and vowed the church would be open to “self-examination and change.”

Speaking with reporters after the noon mass at Saint Michael’s Cathedral in Springfield, Rozanski said the pastoral letter titled “The Wideness of God’s Mercy” is his answer to a diocesan survey taken last September that generated nearly 3,000 responses.

” We know we’ve offended you in one way or another and if you are separated from us because of that please don’t let it stand in the way,” Rozanski said. ” Come back to the church.” …

David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), called the latest apology “public relations” and said Rozanski should take tangible steps to protect children from abuse.

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IS POPE FRANCIS’ ABUSE COMMISSION A FAIL?

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

BY PATRICIA MILLER FEBRUARY 10, 2016

Pope Francis’ formation of a committee to advise him on long-term policies to stem clerical sexual abuse was hailed as a major step forward in the Catholic Church’s bungled handling of the abuse crisis. But an internal crisis within the committee—along with the glacial pace of any reforms—is raising questions about the credibility and effectiveness of the committee going forward.

Over the weekend, Peter Saunders, one of two actual survivors of sexual abuse serving on the committee, was booted off by a nearly unanimous vote of the other members. They asserted that the committee’s role is specifically advisory and limited to developing long-term policies to prevent abuse and that Saunders was upsetting the apple cart by advocating for more immediate action and intervention in specific cases.

What seems to have gotten Saunders in hot water is his continued opposition to Pope Francis’ appointment of Bishop Juan Barros to lead the diocese of Osorno, Chile, despite evidence that he covered up sexual abuse spanning two decades. Not only is Barros accused of covering up for Fr. Fernando Karadima, who was the Marcial Maciel of Chile, abusing a series of seminarians over the years with “a powerful cocktail of sexual guilt and secrecy” and using his “pious standing among the elite to conceal [his] depravity.” He was also “cited in the victims’ testimonies as having been present during sexual acts.”

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Pope’s reformer tells the ‘baby bishops’ how to manage money

VATICAN CITY
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor February 10, 2016

One could perhaps understand if Australian Cardinal George Pell, who was tapped by Pope Francis in 2014 as his point man for financial reform in the Vatican, was content these days to just sort of phone it in.

Pell turns 75 in June, the retirement age for Catholic bishops, and although cardinals often serve well beyond that threshold, the clock is ticking. His efforts to promote accountability have drawn resistance from the Vatican’s Italian old guard, and he’s facing an inquest from a Royal Commission in Australia about his handling of sex abuse cases decades ago.

Yet despite it all, Pell shows no signs of surrender.

Recently, the Vatican published a collection of papers presented to new Catholic bishops from around the world taking part in a Rome training course known informally as “baby bishops school.”

While several presentations were of dubious real-world value, not so with Pell’s. He was his usual no-nonsense self, wryly warning new bishops that “dishonesty is not unknown” in how Church personnel handle money.

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Survivors Group Says Ohio Diocese Ignored Reports About Child Sex Abuse Suspect

OHIO
WCBE

By JIM LETIZIA

Victims of the Catholic church sex abuse scandal are criticizing the Diocese of Steubenville for its handling of a now former central Ohio seminarian charged with trying to adopt a child for sex.

The group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests says church leaders somehow overlooked a report that Joel Wright wanted to pay parents to babysit their children. Wright, a former student at the Pontifical College Josephinum, was recently arrested by federal agents. The diocese has declined comment.

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Unholy Act

TEXAS
Texas Monthly

April 2005

By Pamela Colloff

It is the glory of God to conceal a thing, but the honor of kings is to search out a matter.—Proverbs 25:2

“You don’t know what a welcome surprise it was to hear from you,” Irene Garza wrote in her graceful longhand, in a letter to an old friend postmarked April 9, 1960. As she filled five pages of unlined paper, the 25-year-old schoolteacher seemed content for the first time in a long while. “I’ve made quite a few friends this year and am much happier than I’ve ever been,” she wrote. Of her love life, she reported that she had been dating two men but was coy with her friend about one of them: “I won’t mention his name, but we double-dated the last time you were here.” The other, she wrote without much enthusiasm, was an “Anglo boy—not real handsome, but cute and religious (which is important).” She noted that her ex-boyfriend had sent her several cards and a box of candy on Valentine’s Day. “I can’t lie—I think of him often and wonder if I’ll ever get over him (between you and me and the four walls),” she confided. “I pray constantly that if it be God’s will, I will get over him eventually.”

To her friends and admirers, Irene was many things: a natural beauty who had been crowned Miss All South Texas Sweetheart 1958; a former prom and homecoming queen at Pan American College; an accomplished teacher who worked with McAllen’s most disadvantaged children; a devout Catholic who was active in the Legion of Mary; the first person in her family to attend college and graduate school. But in her letter, Irene appeared more fragile than anyone might have suspected. At the elementary school where she taught second grade, she wrote, she had been elected secretary of the PTA. “This may not sound like much, but to me it means a great deal,” she explained. “It means I’m overcoming my terrible shyness and becoming surer of myself.” Her job was a source of great pride (“These children I am teaching have been such a joy to me”), but it was her faith, which she returned to again and again in her letter, that sustained her. “Remember the last time we talked, I told you I was afraid of death?” she wrote. “Well I think I’m cured. You see, I’ve been going to communion and Mass daily and you can’t imagine the courage and faith and happiness it has given me.”

The following Saturday, April 16, 1960, Irene borrowed the family car to go to church, promising her mother she would not be long. She left her parents’ house around six-thirty in the evening and made the twelve-block drive to Sacred Heart Church, where she planned to go to confession. Irene rarely went unnoticed; some would-be suitors came to mass just to admire her, and that night, as people waited for absolution, many caught sight of her. One parishioner noticed Irene make the sign of the cross as she entered the sanctuary. Another parishioner saw her kneeling by herself in a pew on the fifth row. A third remembered Irene asking if she might edge in front of her in the long confession line because she was running late. Some recalled her draping a white lace veil over her head, while others said she had stepped out of line, as if turning to go. Yet no one ever saw her leave the church that night. The next morning, Easter Sunday, her car was still parked down the street from Sacred Heart. Irene never came home.

A single high-heeled shoe, which had been cast to the side of the road, was the first clue that she was dead. A passerby named P. W. Miller happened upon it two days later, on an empty stretch of McColl Road, where it lay two inches from the curb. It was a small, beige, Fiancées brand pump, which fit a woman’s left foot; it was slightly scuffed, and its heel tap was missing. Irene’s family confirmed that she had worn the same shoe to confession.

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After 50 Years, ‘Killer’ Priest Finally Faces Justice

TEXAS
The Daily Beast

Brandy Zadrozny

When police found a Texas beauty queen floating in a canal, they suspected the last man to see her alive: her Catholic priest. Now he’s finally been arrested for the 1960 murder.

In the 56 years since the body of a south Texas beauty queen was found floating in a canal, her family, cold-case investigators and mounting evidence has pointed to one man: the ex-priest who heard her last confession, and who seemed to elude justice until his arrest on Tuesday.

John Feit, 83, was arrested by detectives with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in Scottsdale, Arizona, where he lives with his wife and family. Arizona law enforcement officials say he’ll be extradited to Texas where he’ll face charges of first degree murder by asphyxiation, according to a recently unsealed indictment reported by The Monitor in Texas. He faces up to life in prison.

At his arraignment, a Maricopa County judge set a $750,000 bond and Feit said he planned to fight extradition.

“This whole thing makes no sense because the crime in question took place in 1960,” Feit said. “In 2003 the same gentlemen were here and questioned me extensively and took DNA samples.

That was 13 years ago. I’m totally puzzled as to why something is coming up now after the fact.”

Though half a century old, the case has remained a fascination of crime reporters, townspeople, and local officials, who—no doubt because of the unholy nature of the crime—have refused to let the case go completely cold.

As told in an exhaustive 2005 Texas Monthly profile, Irene Garza, a second-grade teacher, was last seen on the night before Easter attending Sacred Heart Church in McAllen, Texas. The 25-year-old former pageant winner had found comfort in church, writing to a friend, “I’ve been going to communion and Mass daily and you can’t imagine the courage and faith and happiness it has given me.”

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Court stands by decision overturning cleric’s conviction

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

by Jeremy Roebuck, STAFF WRITER.

A state appellate court on Wednesday refused to reconsider its decision last year to overturn what had been the first conviction nationwide of a Roman Catholic Church official for covering up child sex abuse by priests.

The Pennsylvania Superior Court denied a request from District Attorney Seth Williams to reargue the case against Msgr. William J. Lynn in front of a full panel of the court’s nine judges.

The decision came two months after a three-judge panel of the court ordered a new trial for Lynn, continuing what has become a drawn out legal fight for the 64-year-old cleric three year years after his original conviction on child endangerment charges.

Williams’ office could now appeal the Superior Court decision to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court or move forward with the new trial ordered by the Superior Court. “We are in the process of reviewing the decision,” a spokesman for the office said. .

The monsignor remains housed in a state prison in Waymart, northeast of Scranton, having completed more than two years of his three- to six-year term.

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OK– Witness is validated by ex-priest’s arrest for murder

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2016

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

An Oklahoma man is a key witness in the case of an ex-priest who has just been arrested for murdering a Texas girl 56 years ago. We are deeply grateful that John Feit has finally been charged. But we’re especially grateful for the role Dale Tacheny of Oklahoma City has played in this case.

Tacheny has told prosecutors that Feit admitted to him that he killed Irene Garza. That move – disclosing this information to law enforcement – took considerable courage because, at the time, both men were priests. It’s exceedingly rare.

We applaud Tacheny’s courage and compassion, then and now.

( Tragically, however, a Catholic politician attacked Tacheny’s credibility and refused to pursue Feit.]

[SNAP]

Feit worked and lived in Arizona, lived in New Mexico and was convicted of assaulting another young woman in Texas. Now, Catholic officials in all three states have a moral and civic duty to prod other witnesses to step forward.

[The Monitor]

In the 1960s, Feit worked at the New Mexico-based Servants of the Paraclete, a Catholic facility where predator priests were housed and purportedly “treated.” That was “after his criminal problems in South Texas prompted his bosses to remove him from parish work” and he “had been convicted in a young woman’s sexual assault,” according to the Dallas Morning News.

[BishopAccountability.org]

We fear he may have hurt young women in New Mexico and Arizona too.

We hope that this arrest brings some hope to Irene Garza’s brave and devoted family. We applaud them for their persistence and patience. And we hope that anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy crimes or misdeeds by Feit – or cover ups by his church supervisors will call police, expose wrongdoers, protect others and start healing, like Tacheny has done.

We also hope that Santa Fe Archbishop John Wester, Phoenix Bishop Thomas Olmsted and Brownsville Bishop Daniel Flores will use personal appeals, parish bulletins, church websites and pulpit announcements to beg others with information or suspicions about Feit to call law enforcement immediately. Now is no time for Catholic officials to act powerless or for citizens to be complacent. Every shred of evidence – no matter how small, old or seemingly insignificant – should be withheld from police and prosecutors.

And we hope Oklahoma City Archbishop Paul Coakley will publicly praise Tacheny and urge anyone in Oklahoma with information or suspicions about crimes by clerics to call police and prosecutors, no matter how long ago the wrongdoing may have happened.

Three months ago, we wrote to Hildalgo County prosecutor Ricardo Rodriguez about this case. We are certain, however, that the diligence of the Garza family that made the difference here. Again, we are grateful to them for the courage and compassion they have shown throughout this ordeal.

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FR. JOHN FEIT, MURDERER

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Berger’s Beat

February 10, 2016 11:49 am | Author: berger

Years ago, at a monastery in Ava, MO, Fr. John Feit admitted murdering a young Texas beauty queen to a fellow priest, Fr. Dale Tacheny. Yesterday, 56 years after Irene Garza’s death, Feit was arrested. After the crime, Feit went to work for the Servants of the Paraclete, which is now based in our town. They run “treatment centers” for pedophile priests.

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Sex Abuse Commission Member’s Suspension Overshadows Vatican Meeting

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

by EDWARD PENTIN 02/10/2016

VATICAN CITY — Members of a pontifical commission are asking Pope Francis to remind all Church authorities of the importance of responding directly to abuse victims who approach them.

The recommendation was just one of a series of proposals drawn up at the end of a weeklong plenary meeting of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, a body Pope Francis set up in in 2014 to propose initiatives to protect children from clerical abuse.

But media coverage of the meeting has focused on another, unexpected development: The commission’s announcement of the suspension of controversial commission member Peter Saunders.

Other plans put forward during the plenary included more transparency around canonical trials with the participation of external collaborators, the finalization of a Universal Day of Prayer and a penitential liturgy, and a new website to share best practices for the protection of minors worldwide.

In a Feb. 8 statement, the commission also reported on its work over the past year, saying its members are “actively in contact” with bishops’ conferences, and had presented measures on safeguarding minors to religious conferences and congregations.

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Undercurrent of unrest continues in Catholic community

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

Jasmine Stole | Post News Staff

A group of local Catholics says a number of their concerns have still not been addressed by the Archdiocese of Agana leadership. The group is continuing to call attention to its concerns publicly even as the church enters the Lenten season.

Yesterday, Feb. 10 was Ash Wednesday which marked the start of the Lenten season – 40 days of fasting, prayer and repentance for Catholics. Thousands of Catholics attended Ash Wednesday Masses throughout the day yesterday. Each year, the village parishes schedule multiple Masses during the day to accommodate a large number of church-goers, with the larger parishes offering as many as six Ash Wednesday Masses. Ash Wednesday and Good Friday are obligatory days of fasting and abstinence for Catholics.

An estimated 85 percent of the local population is Roman Catholic.

“We’re really strong in our faith,” said Lou Klitzkie, a member of the Laity Forward Movement, who also attended Ash Wednesday Mass yesterday. “We don’t want to lose our Catholic church.”

The Laity Forward Movement has organized several silent protests in front of the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica in Hagåtña, the latest of which took place Jan. 31.

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Hartford Catholic Diocese settles sexual abuse lawsuit

CONNECTICUT
Fox 61

BY JIM MCKEEVER

NEW HAVEN — A lawsuit involving allegations of clergy sex abuse with a minor and an alleged cover-up in the Catholic Church was settled Wednesday for $500,000.

Just weeks before the trial involving a former Connecticut-based Catholic priest, Stephen Bzdyra, was to begin, the Diocese agreed to settle the claim.

For the past five years, the Diocese fully contested liability, denying knowledge of sexual and physical abuse that was committed by Bzdyra.

The defense was compromised when a Catholic nun testified that while serving at St. Francis Church in New Haven, she not only witnessed Bzdyra’s disturbing and inappropriate behavior towards an altar boy in the mid-1980s, but she even sent a letter to diocesan authorities expressing her concerns.

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Archdiocese Settles Sexual Abuse Lawsuit Against a Priest with Prior Naugatuck Ties

CONNECTICUT
Patch

By BRIAN MCCREADY (Patch Staff) – February 10, 2016

The Archdiocese of Hartford has agreed to pay a former altar boy $500,000 to settle a sexual abuse lawsuit against a priest, the Connecticut Post reports.

The allegations date back to the mid 1980s and the accused priest was placed on leave in 2010.

The Rev. Stephen Bzdyra was accused in a lawsuit of sexually molesting an altar boy between 1985 to 1990 while he was at St. Francis Church in New Haven and St. Hedwig Church in Naugatuck.

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Priest arrested over alleged ‎€30m fraud

ITALY
The Guardian (UK)

Agence France-Presse in Rome
Wednesday 10 February 2016 1

Italian police have announced the arrest of a retired cleric suspected of having defrauded investors of ‎€30m (£23m), which they were told would help fund a humanitarian foundation.

The Argentinian-born Patrizio Benvenuti, 64, former military chaplain in Italy who retired to the Canary Islands, had won the confidence of investors due to his work in the Vatican’s legal tribunal.

He has been placed under house arrest and a European arrest warrant has also been issued for one of his close collaborators, 54-year-old Christian Ventisette, a French businessman involved in finance and property.

The inquiry has identified nine suspected accomplices and nearly 300 victims, most of them elderly people living abroad.

The financial police said on Wednesday that the victims sent money “in the hope of entrusting their savings to finance and property-sector experts as well as with the will to contribute to and help the humanitarian foundation Kepha,” which was run by Benvenuti.

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Truffa da 30 milioni di euro, arrestato monsignore in partenza per le Canarie

ITALIA
TGCOM24

13:50 – Monsignor Patrizio Benvenuti, alto prelato 64enne di origini argentine, è stato arrestato dalla guardi di finanza di Bolzano. E’ accusato di una truffa da 30 milioni di euro ai danni di quasi 300 persone, prevalentemente residenti all’estero e per lo più in età avanzata. I soldi versati al sacerdote, destinati alla sua fondazione umanitaria Kepha, finivano in un articolato meccanismo di riciclaggio tra persone, società estere e italiane.

Sequestrata lussuosa villa del ‘400 a Piombino – La Gdf ha sequestrato in via preventiva una lussuosa dimora del Quattrocento a Piombino, Villa Vittoria (valore 8 milioni di euro), e un grande sito archeologico a Selinunte (valore 850mila euro). Sigilli anche per un edificio a Poggio Catino, in provincia di Rieti (valore di 530mila euro) e altri immobili e terreni a Poppi, ad Arezzo (valore di 670mila euro).

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Catholic Church child abuse: Pope Francis passes up meeting with Mexican victims of serial abuser Marcial Maciel

MEXICO
Independent (UK)

Michael Day Rome @michael2day

Pope Francis begins a high-profile visit to Latin America this week in what should be a series of celebrations for the Argentinian pontiff.

Attention instead looks set to be fixed again on arguably the single most shocking case of multiple child abuse, cover-ups and conspiracy in a series of worldwide clerical paedophilia cases.

Even before Francis touches down in Mexico city, victims of serial abuser Marcial Maciel, the close friend of Pope John Paul II, and head of the Legionaries of Christ, are dismayed that Pope Francis will not find time to meet them despite him spending a whole week in Mexico.

The Mexican religious institution had at its height 800 priests, 15 universities, and more than 100 prep schools. Maciel, who died in the US in 2008, aged 86, is said to have exploited his power and position to abuse boys and young men for many decades. It is even thought he abused two of his own children from relations with two women.

Despite this, he continued to have the ear of Pope John Paul II, and accompanied him during papal visits to Mexico in 1979, 1990 and 1993 – long after formal charges had been filed against him in ecclesiastical courts in Rome.

Barbara Blaine, the president of the US-based support group SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), said: “Of course, Francis should meet with the Mexican victims. But it seems he only meets victims of abuse for good PR.”

She added: “He doesn’t seem to meet the victims who are likely to cause controversy.” Given the “proven layers of conspiracy and cover-up” over Maciel, she said such a meeting would not be easy for the Vatican to “stage manage”.

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Archdiocese settles sex abuse lawsuit

CONNECTICUT
CT Post

By Daniel Tepfer
Wednesday, February 10, 2016

New Haven—The Archdiocese of Hartford has agreed to pay $500,000 to settle a sex abuse allegation against a New Haven priest, the lawyers for the plaintiff announced Wednesday.
The settlement was reached just weeks before the civil trial was to begin.

The Rev. Stephen Bzdyra, was accused in a lawsuit of sexually molesting an altar boy between 1985 and 1990 at St. Francis Church in New Haven and St. Hedwig Church in Naugatuck.

Bzdyra was placed on administrative leave by the archdiocese in 2010.

“One source of comfort for the plaintiff is that upon commencement of this case the diocese took Bzdyra out of circulation—as he was a fully active priest until that time,” said the plaintiff’s lawyer, Joel T. Faxon. “This is the only time in my twenty-year career where we were able to actually have a pedophile priest put on the shelf—which protected any number of children from potential abuse.” .

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UPDATE: Judge sets Feit’s bond at $750,000 in Irene Garza case

TEXAS/ARIZONA
The Monitor

LORENZO ZAZUETA-CASTRO KRISTIAN HERNANDEZ | STAFF WRITER

UPDATE 12:15 p.m. : A Maricopa County Judge set a $750,000 bond for John Feit Tuesday morning following the unsealing of his indictment in Hidalgo County.

During his arraignment Feit stated he plans to fight extradition.

“My instinct is to fight extradition,” Feit said as he stood before the judge. “This whole thing makes no sense because the crime in question took place in 1960.”

Feit was charged with first degree murder punishable by up to life in prison. His next court appearance was scheduled for Feb. 24.

UPDATE 11:57 a.m. : Hidalgo County District Attorney Rick Rodriguez will not comment on the case at this time but said the process to have John Feit extradited to the area is underway.

UPDATE 11:45 a.m. : Presiding Judge Mario Ramirez did not set a bond after unsealing the John Feit indictment Wednesday morning.

Judge Luis Singletary will be responsible for the bond. Singleterry said he would not set a bond until Feit was extradited back to McAllen.

UPDATE 11:30 a.m. : Indictment states John Feit caused the death of Irene Garza by asphyxiation.

UPDATE 11:10 a.m. : A grand jury indictment accusing former Sacred Heart priest of the April 16, 1960 murder of Irene Garza was unsealed Wednesday morning at the 332nd Hidalgo County District Court.

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Video: Former McAllen priest John Feit says he’ll fight extradition from Arizona

ARIZONA/TEXAS
Valley Central

John Feit — the former McAllen priest accused of killing beauty queen Irene Garza in April 1960 — told an Arizona judge Wednesday that he’ll fight extradition to Texas.

Feit appeared in court Wednesday morning in Maricopa County, Arizona.

When Feit said he opposed extradition to Texas, the judge set a $750,000 cash-only bond.

“This whole thing makes no sense to me because the crime in question took place in 1960,” Feit said, according to a video recording of the court appearance published on the Maricopa County website.

The judge scheduled the next hearing for Feb. 24.

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Ex-priest fighting extradition in 56-year-old murder case

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

By Aaron Nelsen
February 10, 2016

McALLEN — A former priest in custody for the murder of a McAllen teacher in 1960 is contesting his extradition to Texas, authorities said Wednesday.

John Feit, 83, was arrested Tuesday in Phoenix on a murder charge in the death by asphyxiation of 25-year-old Irene Garza.

Several months after Garza’s body was found, Feit was charged with assaulting another woman in nearby Edinburg. He fled the state and was declared a fugitive before surrendering. The case against him ended in a mistrial but in 1962, he pleaded no contest to aggravated assault and was fined $500.

According to various news sources, he entered Assumption Abbey, a Trappist monastery in southwest Missouri, in 1963. He left the church in 1972, and later married and had children. It wasn’t immediately clear how long he has been living in Arizona.

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A judge has breathed new life into a priest sexual abuse case that has dogged the Archdiocese of Chicago for a decade

CHICAGO (IL)
Daily Journal

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 10, 2016

CHICAGO — A judge has breathed new life into a priest sexual abuse case that has dogged the Archdiocese of Chicago for a decade.

Cook County Circuit Judge Clare McWilliams ruled Tuesday that those who were sexual abuse victims of former priest Daniel McCormack after September 2000 can seek punitive damages from the archdiocese if their lawsuits proceed to trial.

McWilliams found it reasonably likely that victims’ attorneys could prove the archdiocese “showed utter indifference” to children’s safety because it ordained McCormack despite knowing he’d engaged in sexual misconduct.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to abusing five children and was sentenced to five years in prison.

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Catholic bishops not obliged to report clerical child abuse, Vatican says

VATICAN CITY
The Guardian (UK)

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Rome
Wednesday 10 February 2016

The Catholic church is telling newly appointed bishops that it is “not necessarily” their duty to report accusations of clerical child abuse and that only victims or their families should make the decision to report abuse to police.

A document that spells out how senior clergy members ought to deal with allegations of abuse, which was recently released by the Vatican, emphasised that, though they must be aware of local laws, bishops’ only duty was to address such allegations internally.

“According to the state of civil laws of each country where reporting is obligatory, it is not necessarily the duty of the bishop to report suspects to authorities, the police or state prosecutors in the moment when they are made aware of crimes or sinful deeds,” the training document states.

The training guidelines were written by a controversial French monsignor and psychotherapist, Tony Anatrella, who serves as a consultant to the Pontifical Council for the Family. The Vatican released the guidelines – which are part of a broader training programme for newly named bishops – at a press conference earlier this month and is now seeking feedback.

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Italy arrests priest for allegedly defrauding elderly savers

ITALY
Yahoo! News

By Isla Binnie

ROME (Reuters) – A Roman Catholic prelate has been arrested for allegedly defrauding hundreds of elderly people out of millions of euros through an elaborate money-laundering scheme, Italian police said on Wednesday.

Monsignor Patrizio Benvenuti, 64, originally from Argentina, has been placed under house arrest, and an international arrest warrant has been issued for French financier and property dealer Christian Ventisette, 54, whom authorities have not been able to find, finance police said in a statement.

Police said the pair persuaded 300 would-be savers in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Luxembourg, the United States and Italy to invest 30 million euros ($34 million), encouraged by the promise of helping a charitable foundation.

Contacted by Reuters, Benvenuti said he “substantially rejected” the accusations aimed at him personally. He added that he did not know about finance, suggesting Ventisette had been responsible.

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Priest joins campaign calling for inquiry to cover abuse within the Catholic Church

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Pressure on the Scottish Government to widen the scope of an inquiry into historic child abuse has grown after a priest joined calls for institutions of the Catholic Church to be covered.

Father Gerry Magee, Parish Priest of Saint Winin’s Church, Kilwinning, has agreed to chair White Flowers Alba, a group representing victims of abuse within the Catholic Church.

The group is demanding the Government extend the inquiry, which is being chaired by Susan O’Brien QC, to include the abuse suffered by anyone at non-residential settings run by the church, including schools and nurseries. At present, unlike a similar inquiry in England, the Scottish inquiry only covers those abused in residential care.

Under-fire education secretary Angela Constance will meet victims of abuse tomorrow [Thurs] at Holyrood to hear their concerns. Fr Magee will attend along with members of White Flowers Alba, and his involvement with the group has been backed by the Bishop of Galloway, Bill Nolan.

He said: “I feel that the government is letting the people down and has let the people down. These people were treated like dirt by their abusers and they are continuing to be treated like dirt by the government and the Church.

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Priest suspected in 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen arrested

ARIZONA/TEXAS
CBS News

Last Updated Feb 10, 2016

PHOENIX, Ariz. –A priest suspected in a 1960 Texas murder was arrested Tuesday in Scottsdale. The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office confirmed the arrest of Father John Feit, reports CBS affiliate KPHO.

The body of Irene Garza, 25, was found in an irrigation canal in McAllen, Texas in April 1960. The last time anybody saw the beauty queen, she was going to confession at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Feit, 27 at the time, heard that confession. He was a visiting priest.

“48 Hours” aired a story about the case — “The Last Confession” — on March 1, 2014. The story was updated on July 26 that year.

Feit now faces a murder charge in Garza’s death, and is awaiting extradition to Texas, officials said.

Hidalgo County District Attorney Ricardo Rodriguez said he presented the case against Feit to a grand jury last week. Ricardo said: “We felt that we had sufficient evidence to present to a grand jury. It was presented last week, and they came back with a true bill.”

While police interviewed hundreds of people in connection with Garza’s murder, Feit was their focus. He was the last person to see Garza alive.

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Ex-priest again fights suspicion in 1960 rape-slaying of woman last seen at confession

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

BRENDA RODRIGUEZ and DOUG J. SWANSON
Staff Writers

Editor’s note: This story appeared in the Nov. 3, 2002, editions of The Dallas Morning News.

McALLEN, Texas – Those who knew and loved Irene Garza remember her as serenely beautiful and deeply religious. When the 25-year-old schoolteacher was raped and murdered in 1960, some of them – devout Catholics like Miss Garza – began to ask a single, corrosive question: Could a man of God have committed such a horrible crime?

Forty-two years later, they’re still asking it.

Not long after Miss Garza’s muddy, battered body was pulled from a murky canal, the Rev. John Feit, a Catholic priest, denied killing her. Many in McAllen believed he was lying.

As police try to reignite the cold investigation, Mr. Feit continues to insist he is innocent. “I did not kill Irene Garza,” he said recently.

And many persist in their suspicion that he’s not telling the truth. Clint Mussey, McAllen’s police chief in 1960, says he strongly suspected Mr. Feit at the time. That feeling hasn’t abated.

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Anatomy of a murder case

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

Editor’s note: This timeline of events appeared in the Nov. 21, 2004, editions of The Dallas Morning News.

John Feit has been the prime suspect in Irene Garza’s rape and murder since April 1960, when she vanished after going to church in McAllen on the night before Easter. Here are key dates in the case:

1960

March 23: A man attacks Maria America Guerra, 20, while she prays alone at a church in Edinburg. He flees after she bites his finger and screams. Ms. Guerra later identifies the man as Father Feit. A witness says she saw Father Feit running from the church shortly after the screaming.

April 16: Irene Garza, 25, disappears after going to Sacred Heart Catholic Church near her McAllen home. Her parents, with whom she lives, tell police she phoned a priest about 6:45 p.m. to arrange for a confession and promised to return home soon. Several parishioners say they saw her that evening at the church, which had long lines of people waiting to make confessions. Her car is found about a block from the church.

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D.A. Loses Appeal In Msgr. Lynn Case; Bail Motion May Be Next

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Big Trial

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2016

By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams lost an appeal in state Superior Court this morning in his crusade to keep Msgr. William J. Lynn behind bars.

Williams had asked the full, nine-member court to review a Dec. 22nd decision by a three-court panel of Superior Court judges that reversed Lynn’s conviction and ordered a new trial. But in a one-sentence decision released this morning, the Superior Court announced that the D.A.’s application “requesting reargument” of the case had been “DENIED.”

Lynn has remained behind bars pending appeals in the case. The 64-year-old monsignor is currently working for 19 cents an hour as the prison librarian at the State Correctional Institute in Waymart, Pa. But now that the state Superior Court has ruled on the D.A.’s appeal, it will surprise nobody if Lynn’s lawyers file a motion for bail.

Meanwhile, the D.A. has a decision to make; whether he will appeal the state Superior Court decision overturning Lynn’s conviction to the state Supreme Court, where he has been successful in the past. The D.A. has not yet issued any public pronouncements on what he will do. But in a press conference last month, Williams vowed to do whatever was necessary to keep Lynn in jail.

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Victims seek “action, not apology” from bishop

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Feb. 10

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

Springfield’s bishop is issuing an apology when he should be protecting kids, exposing predators, punishing enablers and releasing abuse records. Tangible steps will do more to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded that all the words, gestures and apologies.

[MassLive]

Bishop Mitchell Rozanski’s priorities are backwards. The actual safety of innocent kids trumps the purported return of wayward believers. There are 48 publicly accused Springfield area child molesting clerics. What’s Rozanski doing to help make sure they’re in treatment or supervised or being investigated, charged, prosecuted or kept away from kids today?

Bishops’ apologies often sound good but are largely public relations. They don’t protect a single child, expose a single predator, punish a single concealer or deter a single cover up.

The diocese should take tangible steps so that the church no longer will need to give apologies. The goal should be no more victims.

Victims can heal from clergy sex crimes with or without bishops’ words. Kids, however, cannot protect themselves from predator priests without bishops’ actions. Rozanski should warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about two priests who molested in Springfield, are still priests now but live elsewhere, unsupervised, among unsuspecting families.

They are

— Fr. Albert J. “Al” Blanchard. A girl reported having been abused by Blanchard, church officials found her claims to be credible and Blanchard “accepted responsibility” for his behavior and agreed to stay away from minors. He went on to become a certified social worker and “help” street kids in the western Boston suburbs, according to BishopAccountability.org, an independent web-based archive.

In 2009, Blanchard was a volunteer in the Springfield diocese, as a co-leader of a support group for families of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people. The support group included teenagers. Blanchard’s victim complained to the diocese. The diocese did not remove Blanchard from the volunteer position until a news reporter called them a year after the victim’s complaint. As recently as 2006, church officials let Blanchard teach CCD classes.

— Fr. David M. Farland. Here’s what BishopAccountability.org reports about him: Permanently removed from ministry in 2002. Name not publicly released until 3/06. Accusation of abuse of a minor in the early 1990’s, according to the diocese. The matter was handled internally by his superiors who removed Farland from any ministry with access to minors according to Diocesan spokesman. On medical leave in 1994. Last assignment was St. Michael’s cathedral. Admin. process found allegations credible. Life of Prayer & Penance. May be living in RI.

Rozanski should take immediate steps to alert police, prosecutors, parishioners, parents and the public about ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­Fr. Farland and Blanchard. These two predator priests could be assaulting kids and young people today. They could be in Springfield today or this weekend, visiting old parishioners and hurting their kids.

With real outreach by Rozanski, Fr. Farland and Blanchard might even be prosecuted, convicted and imprisoned, sparing others decades of devastating pain.

(Rozanski may claim one or both of these priests have been defrocked. But changing a predator’s job title doesn’t change his or her actual behavior. Catholic officials can’t recruit, educate, ordain, hire, supervise, train, transfer and shield offenders but suddenly cut ties and deny responsibility once the offenders are caught. Rozanski is responsible for the safety of his flock. That includes warning his flock about those who assault kids and may do so again.)

Presumably, Rozanski’s letter is intended to bring healing. But wounded adults can heal themselves, with or without action by bishops. Innocent kids and vulnerable adults, however, cannot protect themselves from predators without action by bishops.

Rozanski should put announcements in every parish bulletin at the first opportunity, begging those who saw, suspected or suffered crimes by Blanchard or Fr. Farland to step forward and call police.

We hope that every single person who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes in western Massachusetts will find the courage to speak up. We hope they’ll call the independent professionals in law enforcement, not the biased and often self-serving bureaucrats in church offices. And we hope they’ll seek independent sources of help, by confiding in therapists, social workers or support groups like ours.

By breaking their silence, victims, witnesses and whistleblowers can find healing, protect others, expose wrongdoers and deter cover ups.

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Despite new witnesses, South Texas DA refuses to pursue ex-priest in 1960 murder case

TEXAS
The Dallas Morning News

BROOKS EGERTON begerton@dallasnews.com
Staff Writer

Published: 10 February 2016

Editor’s note: This story appeared in the Nov. 21, 2004, editions of The Dallas Morning News.

McALLEN, Texas – Police thought they had cracked the sensational old murder case and finally could make an arrest. They thought their new witnesses might finally mean justice for Irene Garza, a schoolteacher who vanished from church on Easter weekend in 1960 after meeting a young priest named John Feit.

The police, however, ran into an immovable opponent on their own side of the law: veteran Hidalgo County District Attorney Rene Guerra, who refused to prosecute.

Mr. Guerra publicly criticized investigators’ work and called the case unsolvable unless “you believe pigs can fly.” He refused for months to take it to a grand jury before relenting under pressure from the victim’s family. He had assistant prosecutors present evidence this year – but they had “no targets in mind,” Mr. Guerra acknowledged recently, and the secret proceeding ended with no indictment.

The main obstacles to prosecution, Mr. Guerra said, are contradictory physical evidence gathered in 1960 and the new witnesses’ unreliability.

But old police records obtained by The Dallas Morning News call that explanation into question, as do interviews with the new witnesses.

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Ex-Catholic priest, 83, is arrested for the murder of beauty queen, 25, whose body was found face down in a canal 56 years ago, days after he heard her confession

TEXAS
Daily Mail (UK)

By WILLS ROBINSON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

A former Catholic priest who is now an 83-year-old married grandfather has been charged with murdering a 25-year-old beauty queen in 1960 after hearing her confession.

Irene Garza, a second grade teacher once crowned Miss South Texas, was last seen alive heading to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen, Texas, to see John Feit, then 27, the day before Easter, almost 56 years ago.

Five days later her lifeless body was found wrapped in burlap, face down in a nearby canal. An autopsy later found she had been raped while unconscious and suffocated.

Feit was considered the prime suspect for more than half a century, but was finally arrested on Tuesday in Scottsdale, Arizona.

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Cardinals’ council formally proposes two new Vatican offices

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Feb. 10, 2016

VATICAN CITY

The nine cardinals advising Pope Francis on reforming the Catholic church’s central bureaucracy have submitted a final proposal for the creation of two new high-level Vatican offices, a spokesman said Tuesday.

The Council of Cardinals have finalized their recommendations for a new Laity-Family-Life office and a Justice-Peace-Migrants office, said Vatican spokesman Jesuit Fr. Federico Lombardi.

The cardinals’ group had been meeting with the pope in Rome Monday and Tuesday for the 13th of its in-person meetings. The group is advising the pontiff on reforming the Vatican bureaucracy, commonly known as the Roman Curia.

The idea for two new high-level Vatican offices has been discussed for months. Lombardi said it is now up to the pope to determine what to do with the proposals.

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Judge: Chicago Archdiocese can be punished for its part in McCormack abuse case

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

Manya Brachear Pashman
Chicago Tribune

A decade after former Roman Catholic priest Daniel McCormack was arrested for molesting children at his West Side church, a Cook County judge has ruled that victims abused by McCormack after September 2000 can seek punitive damages against the Chicago Archdiocese if their lawsuits go to trial.

In a six-page ruling issued Tuesday, Cook County Circuit Judge Clare McWilliams wrote that it was reasonably likely that victims’ lawyers could prove to a jury that by ordaining McCormack and assigning him to parishes, the archdiocese acted with “utter disregard” and therefore deserves to be punished.

While the ruling only applies to this one case, scheduled for trial July 22, it’s likely to guide future civil cases involving McCormack. Furthermore, if cases make it to the trial stage and juries impose punitive damages, it could cost the church millions on top of what it has already paid out to compensate victims of the convicted sex offender.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to molesting five boys and was sentenced to five years in prison. His case led to an overhaul of Chicago church policy and has cost the archdiocese millions of dollars in settlements, which insurance no longer covers. Every case has been settled before making it to trial.

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Vatican abuse commission member responds to leave of absence controversy

ROME
Natonal Catholic Reporter

Marie Collins | Feb. 9, 2016

VIEWPOINT

Editor’s Note: Marie Collins is an Irish sexual abuse survivor and a member of Pope Francis’ Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. She wrote the following statement for NCR following the commission’s decision Saturday that fellow member Peter Saunders take a leave of absence from their work.

As a survivor of child clerical sexual abuse I spent many years silent, then many years speaking out to expose the way the Catholic Church had protected itself and abandoned children to the abusers in its midst. The anger I felt at the continuing reluctance by many Church leaders to report the perpetrators, to cooperate with civil authorities, to treat survivors with justice was overwhelming.

Then came the Pope’s decision in 2013 to set up the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors and my own appointment to that body. This Commission was being put in place to work on devising policy and structural change which could be recommended to the Pope to improve child protection in the future and ensure that all church leaders would implement these policies.

I had to decide if there was any hope that this Commission, through its advice to the Pope, would bring about permanent change within the universal Church or would it be a wasted effort, just a PR exercise. In the end I decided that if there was any hope at all, of protecting children in the future better than in the past, then I should take part.

You do not need to be a survivor to be passionate about the safety of children, about ending the horror of child rape and about change in the Church. I have found the members of the Commission to be sincere individuals contributing from their own area of expertise to the development of new policies.

They are working towards the implementation throughout the world of best practice in safeguarding, education in the area of abuse and justice for survivors. Policies produced are then recommended to the Pope. They are not pawns complicit in a PR exercise but good people with the safety of children at heart.

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Collins: Abuse commission member’s leave followed difficult discussions on group’s purpose

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Feb. 10, 2016

ROME
One of the members of Pope Francis’ commission on issues of clergy sexual abuse has responded to the controversy sparked by the group’s decision to ask another of its members to take a leave of absence from their work.

Marie Collins, an Irish abuse survivor who is one of the 17 members of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, writes Wednesday in a statement for NCR that the leave of absence request arose after a “difference in understanding of the mission and the powers” of the group.

The decision taken by the group, she states, was to ask fellow member Peter Saunders to “take leave of absence to decide how he could contribute to the Commission.”

Collins also strongly refutes allegations made by other abuse survivors that members of the commission believe the sexual abuse crisis has ended and is “behind us already.”

“This is not true,” she writes. “It’s for the very reason that it is NOT behind us that the Commission members are working so hard to change things.”

Collins is writing Wednesday in the first public response from a commission member to the controversy over the leave request for Saunders, a British abuse survivor and founder of the UK’s National Association for People Abused in Childhood.

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Judge: Chicago Archdiocese can be punished for part in McCormack sex abuse case

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Chicago Tribune

February 10, 2016

By Manya Brachear Pashman

Read original article

A decade after defrocked Roman Catholic priest Daniel McCormack was arrested for molesting children at his West Side church, a Cook County judge has ruled that victims abused by McCormack after September 2000 can seek punitive damages against the Chicago Archdiocese if their lawsuits go to trial.

In a six-page ruling issued Tuesday, Cook County Circuit Judge Clare McWilliams wrote that it was reasonably likely that victims’ lawyers could prove to a jury that by ordaining McCormack and assigning him to parishes, the archdiocese acted with “utter disregard” and therefore deserves to be punished.

While this ruling is based on a motion filed in only one victim’s case, scheduled for trial July 22, it’s likely to guide future civil cases involving McCormack. Furthermore, if cases make it to the trial stage and juries impose punitive damages, it could cost the church millions on top of what it has already paid out to compensate victims of the convicted sex offender.

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to molesting five boys and was sentenced to five years in prison. His case led to an overhaul of Chicago church policy and has cost the archdiocese millions of dollars in settlements, which insurance no longer covers. Every case has been settled before making it to trial.

“We have a long history of trying to deal responsibly with these cases to resolve them in a fair and compassionate manner,” said John O’Malley, an attorney for the archdiocese. “But sometimes you can’t do that for one reason or another and the case winds up in court, as this one did. We will continue to act responsibly and compassionately because that’s what we’re about.”

Allegations against McCormack became public in 2006, four years after Cardinal Francis George urged America’s bishops to remove any priest from ministry for a single act of sexual abuse.

But the cardinal himself, when notified that McCormack had been taken into custody by Chicago police in August 2005 for allegedly abusing a boy, did not remove him from ministry until a second arrest in January 2006. Later, outside auditors commissioned by the cardinal uncovered more than 30 missteps by the archdiocese in its handling of the McCormack case. So far, all of the civil suits have been settled before making it to trial.

Eugene Hollander, the attorney for a man who says he was sexually assaulted twice at St. Agatha in the North Lawndale neighborhood in September 2000, said the discovery process for the most recent lawsuits has uncovered more damning evidence that church officials failed to follow their own policies created in the early 1990s and ignored manifold signs that McCormack presented a threat long before that first arrest.

“Even Cardinal George testified in this case, ‘We acted like we were in silos, we didn’t share information, we should have done more,'” Hollander said, referring to the video testimony of George recorded in 2014.

During a hearing on the motion last week, Hollander said witnesses have testified that as an undergraduate at Niles College, McCormack molested a seminarian who had passed out drunk — misconduct that was reported to a counselor at Niles but never documented.

Depositions also revealed that years later when McCormack went to Mexico to learn Spanish with other students from Mundelein Seminary, they observed him hitting on a young man who appeared to be a minor, Hollander said. In reporting that to seminary officials, one of the seminarians added that he recalled McCormack engaging in oral sex with other seminarians at Niles, Hollander said.

When the then-rector of Mundelein Seminary, Gerald Kicanas, now the bishop of Tucson, Ariz., and then-vice rector Msgr. John Canary confronted McCormack, he admitted it, Hollander said, and the leaders notified Cardinal Joseph Bernardin. Yet, even though standard protocol called for expelling a seminarian who acted out in this way, Hollander said, Bernardin ordained McCormack in 1994.

“A jury could find that the defendants were aware that there was a problem of priests and pastors abusing individuals in their official capacity, and yet were reckless in investigating an individual who was training to become a priest when questionable circumstances, some involving borderline-consensual sexual activity, kept occurring,” McWilliams wrote in her ruling.

The judge pointed out that policies established by Bernardin’s own Commission on Clerical Sexual Misconduct called for “documenting seminarians as they progressed in their studies” and unifying the file system to maintain consistent records after they become priests.

McCormack’s first assignment happened to be at St. Ailbe Catholic Church on the South Side, which “was recovering from its own sex abuse scandal at the time he was appointed.” Two other clerics, John Calicott and the late Victor Stewart, have been accused of abusing minors there.

“As such, it is clear the defendants knew and recognized that there was a serious issue of clerical misconduct and recognized that they needed to take active measures to prevent dangerous individuals from being placed in a position where they would be a threat to the well-being of others,” McWilliams said.

During the hearing, archdiocese attorney Jim Geoly argued that the court should prevent inflammatory claims that stir the emotions of a jury and lead to an unfair trial.

“This is an inflammatory allegation, it is child sexual abuse,” Geoly said. “And the court needs to be very careful about inviting the jury to vent anger unless the evidence is really there to support that kind of punitive damage claim.”

That McCormack might have had consensual sexual relations during seminary shouldn’t lead the archdiocese automatically to presume he’s a threat, he said. Geoly also argued that the archdiocese is at a disadvantage because the records from McCormack’s psychological evaluations after concerns arose in seminary have been sealed by the court.

“We actually requested to use the records because we believe they help us,” Geoly said.

Marci Hamilton, a law professor at Yeshiva University and an advocate for victims of clergy sex crimes, said punitive damages are uncommon in abuse cases, namely because the Supreme Court has discouraged them in personal injury cases over the last decade.

“These are the kinds of cases that might trigger a jury to give a large punitive damage even if there’s not proven compensatory damage,” she said, adding that a majority of abuse cases end up being settled and rarely go to trial.

She said such rulings can threaten dioceses financially since insurance often doesn’t cover punitive damages. But that would not be a jury’s problem, she said. Jurors’ main consideration is how much does it take for the defendant to start listening and do the right thing for the public interest.

Betsy Bohlen, chief operating officer for the archdiocese, said insurance no longer covers any claims involving McCormack, and those cases alone have strained the archdiocese — both spiritually and financially.

“There is no doubt there are a lot of things that have suffered,” Bohlen said. “Our own people have suffered in terms of the victims. And that’s a great sin that has happened to people who are faithful people. It’s created significant credibility problems in a world that’s secularizing.”

Though the archdiocese has maintained Bernardin’s pledge years ago that no money from the collection plate would be used to cover sex abuse settlements, the scandal has had an impact on the long-term financial stability of the church. So far, the sale of unused real estate has covered the costs, Bohlen said.

“We’ve had a plan in place for selling real estate based on market conditions and what makes sense for that real estate in a way that doesn’t create any fire sales,” she said. “We’re limited in the kind of investments we can make because those funds have gone elsewhere.”

According to the archdiocese, it has paid out a total of $139 million in clerical sexual abuse claims, but it would not release the total for McCormack settlements. However, last fall, it had received at least 30 substantiated claims against McCormack.

“We have always held that the amounts of settlements are not ours to disclose,” a spokeswoman said, adding that the archdiocese is “disappointed in the ruling and will respond in court at the appropriate time.”

mbrachear@tribpub.com

Twitter @TribSeeker

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EL PARAÍSO DE LOS PEDERASTAS: DE MACIEL A NUESTROS DÍAS

MEXICO
SinEmbargo

Por Shaila Rosagel febrero 10, 2016

Distintos testimonios y documentos acusan que las violaciones sexuales de menores por parte de sacerdotes habrían iniciado hace décadas, pero siempre existe una especie de protección por parte de la alta jerarquía católica y de las autoridades civiles encargadas de investigar.

Ciudad de México, 10 de febrero (SinEmbargo).– En marzo de 2015 el Papa Francisco dijo en entrevista con Valentina Alazraki, corresponsal de Televisa en el Vaticano, que el fundador de la Legión de Cristo, Marcial Maciel, era un “gran enfermo” y que “sería raro” que no tuviera un “padrinito”, por ahí, que encubrió las acusaciones en su contra por casos de abuso sexual cometidos contra de cientos de niños.

“Uno puede presumir que sí (hubo encubrimiento), aunque siempre en justicia hay que presumir la inocencia, pero sería raro que no tuviera algún padrinito por ahí, medio engañado, medio que, que sospechaba y no supiera”, le dijo.

Marcial Maciel Degollado fue un “depredador sexual”, aseguran sus víctimas. En noviembre de 1997 ocho de ellas, ex Legionarios de Cristo, publicaron una carta dirigida al entonces Papa Juan Pablo II, luego de que ese mismo años hubieron público a través del diario Hartford Courant de Connecticut, Estados Unidos, el abuso sexual que sufrieron.

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Missbrauch: Ruhrbistum untersuchte über 190 Hinweise

DEUTSCHLAND
Bistum Essen

[The Essen diocese has received 192 reports of sexual violence. The number is based on evidence presented by victims and by the diocese’s own research. All personnel files of living priests were audited by an external firm. The allegations date back to the early 1950s and many of the accused have died and some could not be identified by name.]

Sämtliche Mitarbeiter des Bistums Essen nahmen an Präventionsschulungen teil.

Seit Bekanntwerden des Missbrauchsskandals in der katholischen Kirche vor sechs Jahren lagen dem Bistum Essen insgesamt 192 Hinweise auf sexualisierte Gewalt vor. Grundlage dafür waren sowohl Hinweise von Opfern wie auch eigene Recherchen. Zudem wurden sämtliche Personalakten lebender Priester durch eine externe Anwaltskanzlei geprüft. Die Vorwürfe reichen bis zum Beginn der 1950er Jahre zurück, viele der Beschuldigten sind bereits verstorben, einige konnten namentlich nicht ermittelt werden.

Diese Hinweise betreffen Priester, Diakone, Ordensangehörige sowie haupt- und ehrenamtlich tätige Mitarbeiter. Von den 58 beschuldigten Priestern sind 42 verstorben. Unter den 35 beschuldigten Ordensangehörigen sind 14 Ordenspriester (davon acht verstorben) und 21 Ordensschwestern (davon 11 verstorben). 12 Priester wurden strafrechtlich verfolgt, 7 von ihnen auch verurteilt. 8 Priester wurden auch kirchenrechtlich verurteilt, 7 Verfahren sind noch nicht abgeschlossen.

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Jewish Care Victoria responds to The Age article, and individual concerned responds

AUSTRALIA
Manny Waks

10/2/2016

​In response to yesterday’s article in Melbourne, Victoria’s The Age newspaper, Jewish Care has issued a public statement, which is reproduced below. Below that is the response by the individual referred to in Jewish Care’s statement.

Jewish Care public statement

Bill Appleby, Jewish Care CEO formally responds to an article that has been published in The Age newspaper on February 10, 2016 entitled Yeshivah Centre Abuse Victims Fear Bullying, Intimidation.

Last December, we announced that we would assist the Yeshivah Centre in the operation of their Redress Scheme which was established to offer assistance to victims of child sexual abuse.

Jewish Care agreed to operate a confidential 1800 number and email address for abuse victims. In addition, our President Mike Debinski was engaged in a personal and separate capacity to oversee the operation of the Scheme.

Our Board agreed to assist Yeshivah because we felt that we were uniquely and appropriately placed to offer assistance to the victims and that we have the relevant expertise in the area to most effectively respond to survivors of abuse; ensuring a caring and empathetic initial response to what is no doubt a traumatic disclosure.

The Board and I are extremely disappointed with the article as it contains a number of serious factual errors. Unfortunately, Jewish Care has been mentioned in The Age article as having breached a victim’s trust after an email sent to the Board of Jewish Care was sent to a member of the Committee of Management at the Yeshivah Centre.

It is absolutely vital to understand that the author of the email mentioned in the article did not identify as a victim, nor did the email contain any victim information. The content of the email only raised an issue of perceived governance concerns. Those concerns have been clarified by the Board with the assistance of independent legal advice.

The article also stated that Jewish Care is the administrator of the new sexual abuse Redress Scheme. This is incorrect. Jewish Care is not the administrator of the Yeshivah Redress Scheme. The Scheme is administered independently of Jewish Care and I have previously described our limited role above.

We believe the implication that Jewish Care Directors released information about a victim to another body is defamatory and formally requested The Age newspaper on the 9th February to immediately retract these inaccuracies.

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Break in ‘unholy’ cold case: Police arrest former beauty queen’s priest in her 1960 killing

TEXAS
Washington Post

Yanan Wang February 10

Fifty-six years ago, a young schoolteacher went to church during Holy Week and never came home.

The next day, a few of her possessions were found scattered along the road outside the local Sacred Heart Church, as Texas Monthly recounted. One high-heeled shoe, a patent-leather handbag, a piece of crumpled white lace.

The following week, her body was found, fully dressed and badly bruised, retrieved from a canal in which someone had left her to decompose, her corpse washed clean of evidence. An autopsy found that she had been raped while comatose.

This was Irene Garza, a 25-year-old, dark-haired belle of McAllen, Tex., who was once named Miss All South Texas Sweetheart. She was her high school’s homecoming queen, the first person in her family to graduate from college and a teacher for disadvantaged children.

Above all, Garza was a devout Catholic. The last place she was seen was at Confession.

The last person to see her? According to Texas Monthly, it was her priest.

The then-27-year-old John Feit was known to be easygoing, if not a little aloof. He had dark hair and horn-rimmed glasses, according to Texas Monthly. On the night of Garza’s disappearance, the priest heard Confessions and celebrated midnight Mass. That was the extent of his activities that night — or, at least, the extent of what he has disclosed to authorities in the last five decades.

Nevertheless, speculation festered. Many in the valley town knew that there was a chance Feit could have been Garza’s killer, but few dared to say it out loud. He was never indicted in the years just after her slaying, nor was he indicted when the case against him was presented to a grand jury in 2004. …

In he beginning, the evidence pointing to Feit was telling but not sufficient to sustain a charge, officials said. While the investigation into Garza’s slaying went on for months after her death, Feit was charged with a separate but eerily similar crime. At a Sacred Heart Church in a neighboring town, a college student named Maria America Guerra reported that she had been attacked three weeks before Garza disappeared.

While she was kneeling at the Communion rail, CBS reported, a man matching Feit’s description grabbed her from behind and tried to put a rag over her mouth.

When asked to pick her assailant out of a police lineup, Guerra chose Feit. When he took a polygraph test and denied that he had harmed either Garza or Guerra, the examiner concluded that he was lying.

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Ex-Priest John Feit arrested in 1960 murder of Irene Garza

TEXAS
ArkLaTex

by ALASTAIR JAMIESON and PHIL HELSEL

A former priest has been arrested over the 1960 murder of Texas beauty queen and schoolteacher Irene Garza, officials and campaigners said Tuesday.

John Feit, 83, was arrested in Scottsdale, Arizona on a murder charge out of Hildago County, Texas — where the one-time Miss South Texas was found dead in a canal, authorities said.

Feit was jailed pending extradition to Texas, a spokesman for the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office in Arizona said in a statement.

His arrest came after a Texas grand jury indicted him on the murder charge, NBC affiliate KPNX in Phoenix reported. It wasn’t immediately clear what new information, if any, led to the charge.

Twenty-five-year-old Garza was last seen at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in McAllen on April 16, 1960. Her body was found April 21 in a canal, according to the Texas Rangers website.

Her family set up a campaign website, Justice for Irene, to sustain public interest in the case even after five decades passed. An update late Tuesday on the site’s associated Facebook page said: “Justice has been served.”

“Charges are being filed… that’s a major break in this 56-year-old case,” it said.

Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director of campaign group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said she was “deeply grateful” Feit was apprehended.

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Sharon Knight MP slams Cardinal George Pell in parliament

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Matthew Dixon
Feb. 10, 2016

WENDOUREE MP Sharon Knight has made an impassioned attack on Ballarat’s Cardinal Pell in a speech she believes reflects the disappointment of much of the city at his failure to return.

Ms Knight told Parliament if Cardinal George Pell’s health condition will be proven to be a “sham” if he ever returns to Australia.

During the speech in the Victorian Parliament on Wednesday morning Ms Knight made it clear Cardinal Pell’s decision meant he should never return to the country.

“Importantly, the Commissioner (for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse) found that Cardinal Pell’s health is not expected to improve so that the risk of his travelling is removed,” she said.

“So, George Pell, stay right where you are. I don’t ever expect to see you back in this country. I don’t expect that you will set foot in Ballarat ever again.”

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The controversy at Mount St. Mary’s goes national after professors are fired

MARYLAND
Washington Post

Susan Svrluga
February 9

Professors from universities across the country — from Stanford to North Carolina Central to the University of Nebraska to Harvard — signed a petition Tuesday calling on the Mount St. Mary’s University administration to reinstate professors who had been fired.

Within hours of being posted, the petition had more than 2,400 digital signatures, a symbol of the outrage from some in the campus community as well as in broader academic circles who viewed the terminations as retribution against faculty who had opposed the president. They also said the decisions threaten the academic freedom at the private Catholic university in Maryland and violate the school’s core principles.

Alumni wrote letters to the university’s board, parents emailed the Archdiocese, and students planned a day of fasting and prayer for the campus on Ash Wednesday.

The controversy began months ago, when the provost and some professors had raised concerns when the president asked for a list of students unlikely to succeed in college several weeks into the school year; one said it was too early to separate those who would do well from those likely to drop out. Simon Newman, the president, told professors, “there will be some collateral damage.”

Newman also said, as first reported by the student newspaper the Mountain Echo and independently confirmed by The Washington Post, that “this is hard for you because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you can’t. You just have to drown the bunnies … put a Glock to their heads.”

On Monday, many were shocked by the abrupt termination of a tenured professor who had objected to the president’s policies, and a law professor and former trustee who had been the adviser of the Mountain Echo, the student paper that published a special edition about the president’s student retention plan.

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Scandal? What Scandal? Philadelphia Inquirer Ignores Blockbuster Story of Bogus Accusations Against Priests In Its Own Backyard

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
TheMediaReport

One would think that the scandal of a drug-addled Philadelphia man making false abuse accusations against multiple Catholic priests – all of whom were convicted and landed in prison, where one has already died – would merit at least a tiny mention in Philly’s newspaper of record, the Philadelphia Inquirer. Heck, it was noteworthy enough to merit a huge cover story in Newsweek magazine only a couple weeks ago.

And indeed during the trials against these priests, the Inquirer gave wall-to-wall coverage with countless stories and hysterical headlines.

But the Inky’s editor-in-chief, Bill Marimow, has made it clear that he has no interest in informing his readers about a fraud being perpetrated right in his own backyard against the Catholic Church.

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Child abuse inquiry taking some evidence ‘as a matter of urgency

SCOTLAND
The Courier

An independent inquiry into the abuse of children in care is to take evidence from some seriously-ill and elderly victims “as a matter of urgency”, its chair has announced.

Susan O’Brien QC said that while the inquiry is “not quite ready” to call for survivors and witnesses to come forward, it had decided to take evidence from a small number of people.

The inquiry, which could take up to four years, will cover allegations of abuse of children in formal institutional care including faith-based organisations, children’s homes and secure care as well as those in foster care, long-term hospital care and boarding schools.

It covers the period “within living memory” up to December 17 2014 and will have the power to compel witnesses to attend and give evidence.

Ms O’Brien said it would be called the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry, adding that references to historical abuses “is misleading” and could deter survivors from coming forward.

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Scottish child abuse inquiry ‘not fit for purpose’, say victims

SCOTLAND
Common Space

Survivors of child abuse criticise narrow scope of inquiry ahead of government meeting

THE EXCLUSION of the Catholic Church and other religious institutions from the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry has prompted heavy crticism from survivors’ groups.

The O’Brien Inquiry, established by the Scottish Government to investigate allegations of child abuse in residential settings and chaired by QC Susan O’Brien, has been criticised by In Care Abuse Survivors Scotland (INCAS), which wants the remit extended to include the Catholic Church. It said the government is ignoring the views of survivors of abuse.

In a letter to education secretary Angela Constance, quoted by the BBC, INCAS parliamentary officer Alan Draper said:

“The failure will result in institutions and organisations, who have covered up criminal activity, escaping public scrutiny, and prosecution.

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Catholic Church “let off the hook” in Scottish abuse probe

SCOTLAND
Premier

Wed 10 Feb 2016
By Antony Bushfield

The Catholic Church is being “let off the hook” for failing children, the In Care Abuse Survivors Scotland (INCAS) group has claimed.

It has called for the Scottish Government to include the faith in the country’s inquiry into the abuse of children in care.

The independent inquiry will be led by Susan O’Brien QC and will cover allegations of abuse of children in formal institutional care including faith-based organisations, children’s homes and secure care as well as those in foster care, long-term hospital care and boarding schools.

It will not cover the wider issue of abuse within the Church and has no powers to look at incidents in parishes or day schools.

INCAS spokesman Alan Draper is quoted by the BBC as saying the inquiry should “fit the purposes of survivors, not those institutions that have failed generations of children”.

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