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 27, 2016

Bishop of Truro apologises to survivor of abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
West Briton

THE Bishop of Truro has apologised to a survivor of abuse by clergy who claimed he failed to act after he revealed his suffering to him more than a decade ago.

The victim of the abuse, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said he named Garth Moore as his abuser to the Right Reverend Tim Thornton in 2003 when he was Bishop of Sherborne in Dorset.

Moore, who was an authority on ecclesiastical law and chancellor of the dioceses of Southwark, Gloucester and Durham, died in 1990.

The alleged victim said the abuse by Mr Moore took place when he was a teenager.

But after he made the disclosure to The Bishop no record was made and nothing happened, he said, adding that The Bishop suggested he could come in and inform the diocese but there was no further help offered.

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.

Survivors arrive in Rome

ROME
Sky News

[with video]

The stage is set in Rome for George Pell’s appearance before the Royal Commission, with survivors of sexual abuse arriving in the Italian capital to hear Pell give evidence tomorrow.

More than $200,000 in crowd funding donations has helped the victims, family members and advocates make it to Rome for the Commission focusing on the abuse of vulnerable children in the town of Ballarat during the 1970’s and 1980’s.

Pell had earlier argued he was too unwell to return home to Australia to give evidence and will instead appear via a video link from Rome, with the travelling survivors in the same room.

The Cardinal has been keeping a low profile ahead his appearance, but was spotted emerging from his home near the Vatican.

He confirmed he’s planning on meeting the victims that have travelled to be at his appearance in person.

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

Spotlight: Top Vatican Cardinal to Testify About Sex Abuse

ROME
ABC News (US)

By NICOLE WINFIELD, ASSOCIATED PRESS VATICAN CITY — Feb 27, 2016

One of the highest-ranking Vatican officials is being compelled to testify in public starting Sunday about clerical sex abuse, an unusual demonstration of holding even the most senior Catholic bishops accountable.

Cardinal George Pell, Pope Francis’ top financial adviser, will testify in a Rome hotel conference room for three nights running, answering questions via video link from Australia’s Royal Commission with his accusers on hand to confront him.

The arrangements, including the 10 p.m.-2 a.m. testimony window to suit Australian time zones, were made after the 74-year-old Pell asked to be excused from traveling home to testify because of previously undisclosed heart conditions that made flying too risky.

The arrangement has had the unintended consequence of magnifying the event, which might otherwise have remained confined to a few news cycles in Australia. Now European and American media will be covering a story about pedophile priests, the rape of children and the church’s botched cover-up — a story the Vatican wants absolutely nothing to do with.

Pell’s testimony will begin just hours before “Spotlight,” the drama of the Boston Globe’s investigation into how the church systematically shielded pedophiles for years, vies for as many as six Academy Awards.

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.

FR. RICHARD POWERS, DECEASED PRIEST OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF BOSTON, TO BE NAMED PUBLICLY FOR THE FIRST TIME AS A REPEAT SEXUAL ABUSER OF A MINOR CHILD

MASSACHUSETTS
Road to Recovery

Fr. Richard Powers, deceased Pastor of St. Luke’s Parish in Belmont, MA, who has never been publicly named, has been accused of repeatedly sexually abusing a minor child

Fr. Richard Powers, who died in 2007, has been accused of repeatedly sexually abusing “John Doe” from approximately 1974-1975 when Fr. Powers was assigned as Pastor of St. Luke’ Parish, Belmont, MA. Fr. Powers was the Pastor of St. Luke’s Parish, Belmont, MA, from approximately 1974-1996

What
A demonstration and leafleting alerting the media, parishioners, and the general public that Fr. Richard Powers will be named publicly for the first time as a repeat sexual abuser of a minor child from approximately 1974-1975 when Fr. Powers was assigned as Pastor of St. Luke’s Parish, Belmont, MA

When
Saturday, February 27, 2016 from 3:15 pm until 5:30 pm (before and after the 4:00 pm Mass)
Sunday, February 28, 2016 from 9:00 am until 12:30 pm (before or after parish Masses)

PRESS CONFERENCE AT 12:30 PM

Where
On the public sidewalk outside St. Luke’s Roman Catholic Church, 132 Lexington Avenue, Belmont, MA 02478 – 617-484-1996. St. Luke’s Parish is now part of a combined parish (with St. Joseph’s Parish, Belmont, MA) known as New Roads Catholic Community

Who
Members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, including its co-founder and President, Dr. Robert M. Hoatson

Why
The clergy sexual abuse scandal is far from over, particularly in the Archdiocese of Boston, where cases of clergy sexual abuse continue to emerge. A deceased priest, who is accused of repeatedly sexually abusing a minor child but has never been publicly named before, Fr. Richard Powers, will be named publicly for the first time. Fr. Richard Powers is accused of repeatedly sexually abusing “John Doe” from approximately 1974-1975 when “John Doe” was a minor child. “John Doe” has suffered terribly since he was repeatedly sexually abused when he and his family were parishioners of St. Luke’s Parish in Belmont, MA. Fr. Richard Powers served as Pastor of St. Luke’s Parish in Belmont, MA from approximately 1974-1996, and demonstrators will alert parishioners to the repeated sexual abuse that allegedly occurred in their parish and ask them to support the victim/survivor who has come forward.

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

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

Law firm takes on clergy, campus abuse

CALIFORNIA
San Diego Union-Tribune

By Gary Warth Feb. 23, 2016

SAN DIEGO — When a Harvard graduate recently decided to sue the prestigious school for not taking her claims of sexual assault seriously, she turned to a law firm about 3,000 miles away to file a suit with two North County attorneys.

“We’ve gotten out there,” said Irwin Zalkin about the growing reputation of the Zalkin Law Firm in Carmel Valley. “We’ve gotten to be known.”

After becoming known for taking on the San Diego Catholic Diocese and representing victims of clergy abuse among Jehovah’s Witnesses across the nation, the firm is earning a new reputation for representing college students who have sued their schools for mishandling their reports of sexual assault or harassment.

While Zalkin has represented victims of clergy abuse for more than a decade, Alex Zalkin, his 31-year-old son who joined the firm about five years ago, has focused on university cases.

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.

Francesco Zanardi, Vittima Di Pedofilia Clericale, L’Uomo Che Fa Tremare Il Vaticano Lotta Senza Quartiere Ai Prelati Conniventi.

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[Despite his small body, Francesco Zanardi is a very stubborn man and an inexhaustible source of strength and courage. Of his personal drama he has managed to make a close battle against the widespread phenomenon of clerical pedophilia becoming, in fact, the worst nightmare of bishops and cardinals who still are scrambling to cover the misdeeds of the abusers in clerical garb.]

di Francesca Lagatta

A dispetto del corpo minuto, Francesco Zanardi è un uomo estremamente testardo e caparbio, una fonte inesauribile di forza e coraggio. Del suo dramma personale è riuscito a fare una serrata battaglia contro il diffuso fenomeno della pedofilia clericale, diventando, di fatto, l’incubo peggiore di Vescovi e Cardinali che ancora si affannano a coprire le malefatte degli orchi in abito talare.

Da vittima di abusi sessuali, diventa, con le sue sole forze, il Presidente di una colossale organizzazione no profit che ad oggi è il più grande osservatorio permanente sui crimini sessuali commessi in Italia dalle confessioni religiose. Rete l’Abuso onlus (visita il sito) attualmente segue i casi di quasi 500 vittime di preti pedofili, tutte legalmente e psicologicamente supportate da un piccolo esercito di volontari.

Per non subire influenze o pressioni di alcun tipo, infatti, l’impavido savonese ha rifiutato qualsiasi contributo pubblico e le tante “caritatevoli” offerte giunte negli anni al suo indirizzo. Con cui forse qualcuno avrebbe voluto comprargli anima e silenzio. Ottenendo l’esatto contrario.

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.

Uncertainty for priest who stole funds; critics call for leadership change

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

Robert McCoppin
Chicago Tribune

Greek Orthodox church leaders from Chicago to Istanbul have remained publicly silent about the fate of a priest who pleaded guilty to stealing more than $100,000 from his former parish, while some church members continue to push for action against not just him but also his superiors in Chicago.

Some critics have called for the Rev. James Dokos to be removed from the priesthood following his plea Monday in Milwaukee to a felony theft charge. Others say the larger scandal is how leaders in the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago have dealt with the controversy, and they want to see changes among its top spiritual leaders.

Leaders in the Metropolis, which oversees dozens of churches throughout the Midwest, initially determined that Dokos did nothing wrong and declined to put him on leave from Sts. Peter and Paul Church in Glenview after a criminal investigation commenced over how he spent money from a trust fund for his previous church, Annunciation, in Milwaukee. Dokos was placed on leave after he was charged, but the resolution of the case has brought no clarity on whether the priest will return to his spiritual duties.

Church officials in Chicago and in the office of the Patriarch of Constantinople, Orthodox Christianity’s spiritual leader in Turkey, have not responded to requests for comment. Just this month, the Metropolis of Chicago announced the formation of a new office of media relations, but no one from that office has offered any comment or returned phone calls or emails since Dokos’ plea deal was completed. A spokesman for the archdiocese of America in New York, which claims 1.5 million members nationwide, said it was too early to say whether there would be disciplinary action in the case.

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

Blow to the Catholic Church as spotlight falls on Cardinal Pell

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

John Ferguson
Victorian Political Editor
Melbourne

It was approaching first light in Rome on February 19 when Cardinal George Pell was informed a Victoria Police investigation into sexual abuse allegations against him was about to be made public.

As his team carefully considered the predicament, crowds were starting to gather in the 5C cold for their Vatican pilgrimage. Back in Australia, the attention was turning to the weekend.

For Pell and his closest minders — religious and legal — the response to the claims that he had abused between five and 10 boys was as sharp as an Italian suit.

“The allegations are without foundation and are utterly false,” read the statement published by The Australian that night. “The timing of these leaks is clearly designed to do maximum damage to the cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermines the work of the royal commission.”

The statement was a pre-emptive strike to position Pell ahead of an inevitable media fracas, with the church savaging police for (allegedly) leaking the information.

During that weekend, several of Australia’s most senior Catholics united in support of the Vatican’s Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, the world’s third most powerful leader of the faith.

While being extensive and targeted, the Pell statement told only part of the story.

For many weeks the church had been aware that the police’s Sano Taskforce was circling Pell, executing warrants to search records and locations connected to his past.

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

Cardinal George Pell Set To Face Royal Commission In Rome

ROME
Huffington Post

Australian clerical abuse victims have arrived in Rome as Cardinal George Pell gets set to take the stand at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The Ballarat clerical abuse victims have made the 16,000 kilometre trip to the Italian capital as Pell readies to front the commission on Monday, Australian time, to give evidence about his time as an adviser to former Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns.

Some of the survivors are said to have touched down in Rome on Saturday morning.

The commission usually hears evidence in Australia, but Pell has been excused from fronting it in person for medical reasons.

Abuse survivor David Ridsdale said the group didn’t know what to expect.

“What I do know is that everything we’ve achieved is because of the group of survivors who have come forward and stuck together,” he told Macquarie Radio Network.

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

Cardinal George Pell’s church career

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

AAP

FEBRUARY 27, 20167

CARDINAL GEORGE PELL’S CAREER IN THE CHURCH

June 8, 1941 – Born in Ballarat, Victoria
December 16, 1966 – Ordained
1971-1972 – Assistant priest Swan Hill parish
1973-1983 – Assistant priest Ballarat East parish
1973 – Shared St Alipius presbytery with Gerald Ridsdale and Monsignor William McMahon
1973-1984 – Episcopal Vicar for Education in Diocese of Ballarat
1981-1984 – Principal of Institute of Catholic Education (now merged with Australian Catholic University)
1984 – Administrator of Bungaree parish
July 16, 1987 – Ordained as Auxiliary Bishop of Archdiocese of Melbourne
1987-1996 – Parish priest Mentone, Bishop for the southern region of Melbourne
1988-1997 – Chair of Caritas Australia
May 27, 1993 – Accompanies Ridsdale to his first court appearance; later says it was a mistake to show priestly solidarity and he did not know full extent of Ridsdale’s crimes
June 16, 1996 – Appointed Archbishop of Melbourne by Pope John Paul II

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

Former pastor at Pomona church pleads no contest to molesting a child

CALIFORNIA
Daily Bulletin

By Beatriz Valenzuela, San Bernardino Sun
POSTED: 02/26/16

RANCHO CUCAMONGA >> A Pomona church youth pastor arrested last month for allegedly sexually abusing at least one boy pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge and will be sentenced Monday, court records show.

Marquis Kidd, 32, had originally pleaded not guilty to all charges Jan. 20, according to court documents. But only a few days later, he pleaded no contest to a single misdemeanor charge of annoying or molesting a child under the age of 18.

Kidd, an elder and youth minister at the Mt. Sinai Church of God at 936 West Ninth St. in Pomona, was arrested Jan. 14 at the Upland Police Station following an investigation into allegations that Kidd had been having inappropriate relations with at least one underage boy, officials said.

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

Foreign priests missing out on child safety checks

IRELAND
The Times (UK)

Sam Griffin
February 27 2016

Concerns have been raised that visiting priests from overseas are being granted access to children without providing the proper documentation to prove they are of good standing.

It is understood the issue was raised by the Archbishop Diarmuid Martin at a recent meeting of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland which advises and monitors best practice in relation to keeping children safe.

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.

County cases against Diocese of Duluth on hold due to bankruptcy case

MINNESOTA
Northlands News Center

By Ramona Marozas

Duluth, MN (NNCNOW.com) — The St. Louis County court cases against the Diocese of Duluth are being put on hold while the Diocese goes through the bankruptcy process in Minneapolis federal court.

As the bankruptcy trial is underway, nothing can happen in the case of Doe Five versus the Diocese of Duluth.

Under Minnesota state law, people still have until May 25 to bring a lawsuit against the Diocese.

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Film Shines A ‘Spotlight’ On Boston’s Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal

UNITED STATES
Rhode Island Public Radio

Transcript

DAVE DAVIES, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. I’m Dave Davies sitting in this week for Terry Gross. In the Neil Simon film “California Suite,” Maggie Smith plays a film star up for an Academy Award. But when she doesn’t win, she doesn’t take it well and leaves before the evening’s over. So later that night…

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, “CALIFORNIA SUITE”)

MAGGIE SMITH: (As Diana Barrie) What was the best picture?

MICHAEL CAINE: (As Sidney Cochran) The best picture? You were there when they announced it. It came after the best actress.

SMITH: (As Diana Barrie) I was in a deep depression at the time. What was the best bloody picture?

CAINE: (As Sidney Cochran) You mean what was the best picture of the year or what did those idiots pick as the best picture of the year?

SMITH: (As Diana Barrie) What won the award you [expletive]?

CAINE: (As Sidney Cochran) I am not an [expletive]. Don’t you call me that.

SMITH: (As Diana Barrie) Sidney, I have just thrown up on some of the best people in Hollywood. Now is no time to be sensitive. What was the best picture?

DAVIES: What was the best picture from the past year is a question we’ll have the answer to late Sunday night at the conclusion of this year’s Academy Awards. We’ll be talking about two contenders on today’s FRESH AIR. In the second half of the show, we’ll hear an interview with the director of “The Big Short” about the global economic crisis of 2008. We’ll start with “Spotlight,” the story of a group of journalists at The Boston Globe who in 2002, published a groundbreaking investigation of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests. The film has earned six Oscar nominations. Our guest, Tom McCarthy, is nominated for best director and for best original screenplay, which he co-wrote with John Singer. Joining us in this interview is Walter Robinson, a veteran reporter and editor who headed the investigative unit at The Globe known as the Spotlight Team. The Globe’s work on the clergy sex abuse scandal won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. I spoke to Tom McCarthy and Walter Robinson last fall. We began with a scene from “Spotlight.” The Globe’s new editor, Marty Baron, played with Liev Schreiber, is having a strategy meeting with the investigative team. The clip starts with Walter Robby Robinson, played by Michael Keaton, talking about how Boston’s cardinal, Bernard Law, must have been aware all along of the church scandal they’re uncovering. The other two reporters are played by Rachel McAdams and Mark Ruffalo.

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Church wrong on abuse: Rome-bound victims

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Megan Neil
February 26, 2016

Cardinal George Pell needs to acknowledge the Catholic Church got it wrong in handling child sex abuse by clergy, survivors say.

Ballarat-born Cardinal Pell should be leading church efforts to help victims, particularly in the Victorian regional city, Ballarat clergy abuse survivor Philip Nagle said.

“George is the one that should be standing up and saying ‘hey we got this wrong and this is what we’re going to do to fix it’,” Mr Nagle told AAP.

“Being the third most powerful person in the church, he has the power to do that.”

Mr Nagle is among a group of 15 survivors headed to Rome to be there when Cardinal Pell gives evidence about widespread abuse by clergy in the Diocese of Ballarat and the Melbourne archdiocese.

They will be in the Rome hotel conference room as Cardinal Pell testifies via videolink to the child sex abuse royal commission in Sydney from Monday (Australian time).

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

Issues for Pell at abuse royal commision

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

February 26, 2016
AAP

WHAT CARDINAL GEORGE PELL HAS TO ANSWER BEFORE CHILD ABUSE ROYAL COMMISSION

WHY HE’S APPEARING AGAIN

Now the Vatican’s finance chief, the former Melbourne and Sydney archbishop and Ballarat priest will give evidence about abuse in the Ballarat diocese and Melbourne archdiocese.

Between 1973 and 1984 Pell was a Ballarat East priest, Episcopal Vicar for Education in the Ballarat diocese and an adviser to the Ballarat bishop.

Pell presided over St Alipius primary school where four Christian Brothers were pedophiles. He and another priest lived in a presbytery with Australia’s worst pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale in 1973.

Pell was Melbourne auxiliary bishop (1987-1996), responsible for a region including Doveton which had a succession of pedophile priests, and then Melbourne archbishop (1996-2001).

CLAIM HE ATTEMPTED TO SILENCE A VICTIM

David Ridsdale claims when he told Pell in 1993 he had been abused by his uncle Gerald Ridsdale, Pell said: “I want to know what it will take to keep you quiet.”

Pell denies the allegation.

CLAIM HE DISMISSED A VICTIM’S COMPLAINT

Timothy Green, 53, said when he was 12 or 13 he told Pell that Brother Edward Dowlan was abusing boys at Ballarat’s St Patrick’s College in 1974. “Fr Pell said `don’t be ridiculous’ and walked out.” Pell says he has no recollection of a conversation with Green and it did not happen.

CLAIM HE REMARKED RIDSDALE OFFENDING AGAIN

Former altar boy BWE said he overheard Pell tell Fr Frank Madden before a funeral in Ballarat in 1983: “Ha, ha, I think Gerry’s been rooting boys again.” Pell’s barrister Sam Duggan said the allegation was utterly false.

Madden said Pell never said that and had never used that kind of language.

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Pell a significant presence for victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MEGAN NEIL
AAP
FEBRUARY 27, 2016

Cardinal George Pell was a strong presence in Phil Nagle’s life as a Catholic schoolboy in Ballarat.

Mr Nagle grew up in a strong Catholic family and was eight when he transferred to the Christian Brothers-run St Alipius Boys’ School in Ballarat East in 1973.

But as Mr Nagle told a Victorian inquiry in 2013: “Ballarat’s St Alipius Primary School in Victoria Street was certainly not the place to be if you were a Catholic boy going to school in the 1970s.”

Its 1973 staff included three pedophile Christian Brothers, with another also teaching there in the early 1970s.

The school chaplain was pedophile Gerald Francis Ridsdale, the Ballarat East assistant priest.

Cardinal Pell was the Ballarat East priest form 1973 until 1984 and, as episcopal vicar for education, oversaw Catholic schools in the Ballarat diocese during that time.

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

George Pell faces ‘moment of truth’ about paedophile priests, victims say

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Cardinal George Pell faces “the moment of truth” about his knowledge of paedophile priests, a victims’ advocacy group says.

If any “silver bullet” exists it will come out during cross-examination of Pell in the child abuse royal commission next week, Broken Rites spokesman Wayne Chamley said.

Pell has already given evidence to the commission twice but Chamley noted that was largely about process – the Melbourne Response complaints handling scheme he set up as Melbourne archbishop in 1996 and the “Ellis defence” case as Sydney archbishop.

Pell’s evidence about any knowledge of paedophile priests during his time in Victoria’s Ballarat diocese and as a Melbourne bishop has a much sharper edge on it, Chamley said.

“This is the moment of truth,” he said. “It’s beyond belief that he didn’t [know]. It’s just beyond belief.”

Chamley said the hearing will be the time for any new documents involving Pell to come out.

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How could Pell not have known of child abuse?

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 27, 2016

Peter FitzSimons
Columnist

Stand by, Australia.

This will be the week that Cardinal George Pell, a pillar of the Catholic Church in Australia for much of the last four decades, and now the third most powerful figure at the Vatican, faces the Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse.

Sadly he will not be be giving his evidence in Australia, as – despite being capable of continuing his normal work running the Vatican finances – 24 hours in a Qantas First Class is quite beyond him.

And yes, even that light observation will no doubt get the hackles up of the Cardinal’s few remaining defenders. But I’d invite them to read my erstwhile colleague David Marr’s devastating piece in The Guardian this week.

With forensic fervour, Marr dissects Cardinal Pell’s position noting that, even though the abuse of children was happening all around him for 30 years, even though many witnesses have come forward and explicitly testified that they TOLD Pell it was going on, still the Cardinal maintains “he knew nothing – nothing while he was a priest in Ballarat about the paedophiles around him, and little about these men and their victims in his years as an auxiliary bishop in Melbourne. He was never in the loop. No one warned him. No one complained to him. He didn’t read that letter or this report. It never came up at meetings. There’s nothing in the minutes. There’s nothing in the files.”

It will, of course, be for the Royal Commission to wade through all that, and Marr makes the point that this will likely be the last chance to actually get to the bottom of it.

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As congregation-based child-protection program goes national, director sees new challenges ahead

PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster Online

ELIZABETH EISENSTADT-EVANS | COLUMNIST

A few nights ago, scrolling down my Facebook feed, I came across a chilling post shared by a friend — that of a dad putting out an all-points bulletin for his absent daughter. Although he described her in detail, down to the tattoo on her ankle, it is her face that haunts me — bright, hopeful, poised. He fears, said the father, that she’s been abducted and trafficked in another state.

It was her face that I had in mind when I called Linda Crockett, director of education and consultation for the SafeChurchSafePlaces project at Lancaster’s Samaritan Counseling Center. Crockett and I last spoke in 2012. At that time the program designed to raise awareness of child sex abuse and better protect children in congregations had been launched in nine local congregations, with the hope that the model would work in other churches across the nation.

Coming to fruition

Four years later, that hope has become a reality.

“The first few years we stayed local. Then we caught on like wildfire,” says Crockett. “I think God has kind of been nudging people (saying): ‘it’s time that those of us who are people of faith do something to stop sexual abuse of children.’ ”

In 2014, the center received funding for a pilot program that enabled them to train approximately 20 leaders in other communities around the country. The program has trained facilitators in areas as diverse as Atlanta, Sewickley (a Pittsburgh suburb) and Harlem.

The mission of the SafeChurch program, says Crockett, “is to shift the culture of congregations so that adults know how to protect children from harm in the church and the community.”

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The History of the Archbishop Who’s Concerned About Girl Scouts

ST. LOUIS (MO)
New York Times

By FRANCIS X. CLINES FEBRUARY 26, 2016

Archbishop Robert Carlson’s recent caution to his parishes in St. Louis about the “troubling pattern of behavior” of the Girl Scouts is stirring stark recollections of the prelate’s past role in managing accusations against priests for sexually abusing children. In a deposition two years ago, he insisted that he was not certain sexual abuse of a child by a priest constituted a criminal act in 1984, when he was auxiliary bishop for St. Paul and Minneapolis handling sex scandal cases.

“I’m not sure whether I knew it was a crime or not,” Archbishop Carlson testified when asked in the deposition about the 30-year-old case. “I understand today it’s a crime.”

To the contrary, a document released by the alleged victim’s lawyers after the deposition showed the cleric’s clear concern for criminal law. He told his diocesan superiors in 1984 that the parents in another case were considering complaining to the police, noting the law’s statute of limitations was applicable for two more years.

There was little uncertainty in the archbishop’s letter this month about the threat he found presented by Girl Scouts’ affiliation with Catholic parishes. He contended the organization’s global associations were “incompatible” with church teachings on such issues as contraception and abortion. He urged pastors to search for alternatives, but Catholic parents quickly defended the wholesomeness of Girl Scouts.

After the pedophilia deposition was made public, the archdiocese released a statement that, whatever Archbishop Carlson’s earlier legal uncertainties, they were distinct from his “moral stance on the sin of pedophilia, which has been that it is a most egregious offense.” Vatican reforms in the wake of the widespread coverup of sexual abusers now order dioceses not to keep allegations under wraps, but to report them to state authorities for criminal investigation.

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Judge: Lousiana priest does not have to disclose alleged abuse discovered during confession

LOUISIANA
KLFY

BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) – A judge ruled Friday afternoon that a priest does not have to disclose possible allegations of sexual abuse against a teenage girl that heard during confession.

There is a Louisiana law that says clergy, who are considered mandatory reporters of suspected child abuse, must report privileged information to the proper authorities if a child’s physical or mental well-being is in danger. District Judge Mike Caldwell ruled the law unconstitutional as it applies to a case against Father Jeff Bayhi.

Father Bayhi testified Friday during the a hearing in the case saying he would be automatically excommunicated from the church if he ever disclosed what anyone said in the confessional, according to The Advocate.

Bishop Robert Muench released the following statement Friday on district court decision:

“As Bishop of the Diocese of Baton Rouge I extend my compassion and offer prayer not only for the plaintiff who may have been harmed by the actions of a man who was not an employee of the church, but also for all who have been abused by anyone.

The court’s decision to uphold the First Amendment right to the free exercise of religion is essential and we appreciate the ruling.

The Diocese of Baton Rouge will continue to do all that is legal and possible to prevent and stop the abuse of children and young people by faithfully following the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.”

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All men need intimacy. Even priests

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Angela Mollard

I was 16 when I watched The Thorn Birds. Riveted hardly describes it. Rachel Ward’s softly beckoning breasts, Richard Chamberlain’s torturous conundrum between God and girl. To my teenage hormones, the romance was captivating and the sexual tension thrilling.

But after four episodes and a speed read through Colleen McCulloch’s 692 breathless pages, I came to a single blinding conclusion: How dumb is it that priests can’t have sex?

I raised it with my maths teacher. How can you concentrate on trigonometry when there’s a nonsensical rule called celibacy preventing the lovely Rachel from getting it on with gorgeous Richard? (Somewhat concerning was the priest being called Ralph, but I digress).

Mr Thomas, as well as teaching Grade 11 maths, also headed up the school’s Christian Fellowship club. Poor man. Imagine having your benign little lesson in tangents hijacked by 20 teens pouring scorn on a central tenet of your faith. From memory, Mr T had a crack at convincing us of the merit of abstention but, as I say, we were 16 and throbbing to the beat of Culture Club. Not having sex for your whole life seemed utterly illogical.

What a validation it is to fledgling adolescent instinct to therefore learn that the Pope at the time was enjoying, if not a sexual relationship, then certainly an intimate one.

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Miranda Devine: Pell punished for trying to aid victims

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

MIRANDA DEVINEThe Sunday Telegraph

TOMORROW at 8am our time, Cardinal George Pell will give evidence via videolink from the Hotel Quirinale in Rome to the child sexual abuse royal commission.

It will be the third time he has testified to the commission. He has hardly been hiding. And yet the point of much of the unrestrained vitriol spewed at him is that he is a coward who has refused to “come home” to testify.

But Pell, 74, has a heart complaint and has been told by doctors not to fly, a fact accepted by royal commissioner Peter McClellan after some delay, which served to add to pressure on the star witness of the $500 million exercise.

Watching Pell tomorrow will be a self-invited group of about 120, including 50 journalists and assorted victims, supporters and Pell-haters who have travelled to Rome, on the proceeds of an abusive ditty by anti-Catholic crooner Tim Minchin, calling Pell “scum” and “coward”.

The royal commission has sent “support staff” and media people, at unknown cost, to assist this unofficial lynch mob.

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Gratitude for Spotlight

UNITED STATES
National Review

by KATHRYN JEAN LOPEZ

A movie that should be a catalyst for prayer, healing, and forgiveness Thank God for the Boston Globe.

Thank God for Spotlight. I watched Spotlight, the movie about the Boston Globe’s investigative reporting that uncovered a clerical-abuse scandal in the Catholic Church, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan one Sunday morning after Mass this fall. I went right after a morning Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

I cried watching that movie. I looked around and saw sorrow. I couldn’t help wondering if someone around me had been hurt by someone who professed to be a man of God. As a member of the body of Christ, which is what the Church is, I wanted to embrace her or him, a son of God, a daughter of God, a brother or sister in Christ. I wanted everyone there to hear the words of Pope Francis during a Mass with people who had been abused by priests in Ireland, Britain, and Germany: “Before God and his people I express my sorrow for the sins and grave crimes of clerical sexual abuse committed against you.

And I humbly ask forgiveness.” It’s been more than a decade since the Boston Globe shined light in the darkest of places. The Church is a different place now. As my friend Ed Mechmann, who runs the Safe Environment program in the Archdiocese of New York, put it in the New York Times, “The Catholic Church in America has done something no other organization in the world has done — we’ve made a huge, across-the-board change in our corporate culture so that now every leader and every worker has child protection as a high item on his agenda. And we’ve been a great success.”

The story Spotlight doesn’t tell is the one that comes after — “a story about learning from tragic mistakes and then committing to a course of transformation,” in Mechmann’s words.

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February 26, 2016

“Noi Sopravvissuti Ai Preti Pedofili Di Ballarat, A Roma Per Chiedere Al Cardinale George Pell La Verità”

ROMA
Rete L’Abuso

“Dall’Australia arriverò a Roma con il mio psicologo per assistere all’audizione del cardinale George Pell sui preti pedofili nella sua diocesi. Sarò nella stessa stanza. Voglio guardarlo negli occhi”.

Le parole di Andrew Collins giungono dall’altro capo del mondo. Partono dalla città di Ballarat dove l’uomo, ora quarantaseienne, è nato e cresciuto. E dove è rimasto vittima di quattro sacerdoti che lo hanno violentato ripetutamente dall’infanzia all’adolescenza.

“Pregavo Dio perchè fermasse gli stupri, ma non è successo. Le violenze includevano stupro anale, penetrazioni, carezze e molestie. Avevo fede ma me l’hanno strappata dal cuore”, racconta all’Huffington Post. Un orrore che lo ha segnato per sempre: “Un giorno decisi di impiccarmi, è stata mia moglie a tagliare il cappio per salvarmi”.

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Aussage Pells mit Spannung erwartet

ROM
Katholisch

Von Sonntag an wird Kurienkardinal George Pell per Videoschaltung vor der australischen Missbrauchskommission aussagen. Im Mittelpunkt der mehrtägigen Befragung sollen Missbrauchsfälle im australischen Bistum Ballarat aus den 1970er Jahren stehen. Damals war Pell dort als Priester tätig und stand in freundschaftlichem Kontakt zu einem Priester, der inzwischen wegen Missbrauchs verurteilt wurde. Pell gehörte zum Beratergremium des Bischofs, bevor er selbst erst Weihbischof und später Erzbischof von Melbourne wurde.

Grund für die Aussage per Videoschaltung ist der Gesundheitszustand Pells, der deshalb nicht zur Aussage nach Australien reisen wollte. Die Kommission stimmte Anfang Februar einem entsprechenden Antrag des Kardinals zu, der seit Februar Leiter der zentralen Finanz- und Wirtschaftsbehörde im Vatikan und einer der einflussreichsten Mitarbeiter des Papstes ist.

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Sesso Con Minori, Parroco Condannato A 5 Anni: “Invitava Studenti Per Massaggiarli”

ITALIA
Rete L’Abuso

[A priest was sentenced to five years in prisons for abusing minors.]

Sette i ragazzi vittime di Don Massimo Iuculano, 47 anni, direttore dell’Istituto salesiano “Sacro cuore di Gesù” di Vercelli. Li invitava in una sala all’interno della struttura, li depilava e li massaggiava con dell’olio. Seguivano palpeggiamenti e rapporti orali.

Ha risarcito le vittime e ha ringraziato la procura per essere intervenuta a fermarlo, ma non è bastato. Il gup Luca Del Colledel Tribunale di Torino ha condannato a cinque anni di carcere don Massimo Iuculano, 47 anni, parroco e direttore dell’Istituto salesiano “Sacro cuore di Gesù” di Vercelli, accusato di diversi episodi di violenza sessuale su minori. All’uscita dal palazzo di giustizia il religioso ha preferito non rilasciare dichiarazioni. “Prendiamo atto – ha detto il suo avvocato, Carlo Blengino – e valuteremo se presentare appello”.

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George Pell: Parents of abused girls in Rome ahead of royal commission hearing

ROME
ABC News

By London bureau chief Lisa Millar

The parents of two girls who were abused by a paedophile priest have arrived in Rome ahead of Cardinal George Pell’s highly-anticipated royal commission appearance.

Anthony and Chrissie Foster were among the first of an estimated 20 people — including survivors, their families and counsellors — to travel from Australia to watch Cardinal Pell’s testimony from a hotel.

“We’re here with some trepidation, of course. It’s been a very big decision to come over here and we wouldn’t have if we didn’t think it was very important,” Mr Foster said, as they left Rome’s Fiumicino airport.

“We really thought there should be victim representatives to hear what Cardinal Pell has to say.”

Other Australians will arrive on Saturday (local time).

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House Passes Bill to Give Sex-abuse Victims More Time to Seek Justice

UTAH
KUER

[with audio]

By WHITTNEY EVANS

The Utah House passed a bill today that would allow victims of sexual abuse to bring civil action against alleged perpetrators even after the statute of limitations has expired.

Last year state lawmakers, passed House Bill 277, which abolished the statute of limitations for sex-abuse victims who were 22 or younger as of March 23rd 2015.

“We thought if we protected children going forward that would be a good step for the future,” says Republican State Representative Ken Ivory. The bill barred anyone who was older than 22 by even a day from bringing their claims. That’s why, when the bill passed, Ivory says, he started getting phone calls from victims.

“People that have lived in Utah as children and they would tell me their horrifying story of their experiences as a child and then they would ask does 277 help me?” Ivory says. “And I would ask them, how old were you on March 23, 2015? And invariably they were older than 22 and I would have to say no, I am sorry.”

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Archdiocese: former Baltimore area priest admits to sexually abusing minor

MARYLAND
ABC 2

Dakarai Turner

BALTIMORE – The Archdiocese of Baltimore has banned a priest from serving or returning to work within the diocese after they say he admitted to sexual abuse of a minor.

The Archdiocese said Fr. Jorge Antonio Velez-Lopez had sexual contact with a teenage girl multiple times beginning in 2007 and possibly continuing into 2010, the last year Velez-Lopez served within the diocese.

The information came to light in January when the victim told the Archdiocese about it, a spokesperson for the Archdiocese said Friday. The Archdiocese says they began looking into it immediately and filed charges with the Howard County Police Department, where Valez-Lopez served at St. John the Evangelist in Columbia from 2003 to 2010.

The victim was a parishioner at Resurrection of Our Lord Parish in Laurel, the spokesman said.

Valez-Lopez also ministered to members of Spanish-speaking communities at Resurrection of Our Lord, Holy Trinity in Glen Burnie, St. John the Evangelist in Frederick, Sacred Heart in Glyndon and St. Joseph in Cockeysville.

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State sues over nonreport of child abuse

DELAWARE
The News Journal

Harry Themal February 26, 2016

Elders of Jehovah’s Witnesses do not have the same privileged communications exemption as religious advisers in a sacramental confession if the confession does not involve a penitent.

The potential landmark “first impression” ruling, reported by Delaware Law Weekly, was made recently by Superior Court Judge Mary Miller Johnston in refusing to throw out a case filed by the state against the Laurel Congregation of the Witnesses.

The state said the elders should have reported a case child abuse between a juvenile and an adult member of the congregation.

The elders met with the juvenile, her mother and an adult member who confirmed the relationship after the boy reported the matter to his mother. They then excommunicated the juvenile and the adult involved. The state sought civil penalties but the Jehovah’s Witnesses said they were exempt from reporting under the Delaware law of “clergy/penitent privilege.”

That law is similar to the attorney/client privilege but the judge ruled that the conversations were not a “sacramental confession.” The defendants said the congregation members were “seeking spiritual advice and counsel from us as elders in a private setting.”

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60 Days for 4 Youth Victims, 24 Sex Felonies & 52 Misdemeanors

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

The New York Daily News, reported: “EXCLUSIVE: Brooklyn rabbi charged with teen sex assault gets 60 days in jail; DA ripped for offering light plea deal.”

While Rabbi Yoel Malik pled guilty to a single misdemeanor count of Sexual Misconduct, Oral/Anal Conduct (NYS PL 130.20.02) his charge sheet included another 52 misdemeanor counts and 24 felony counts of sex crimes with minors which the record shows the DA and the defendant agreed to have covered by the single misdemeanor plea.There were additional felony and misdemeanor charges that were dropped.

I get plea deal bargaining. They spare the victims the ordeal of a trial, save prosecution resources, and eliminate the risk of an acquittal. But an average of 2 days per felony sex crime? That was no deal; it was a giveaway, a travesty. The victims and justice were bamboozled and the public was endangered.

The DA defends this disgraceful trade of less than one day in jail per charge because the victims were “extremely reluctant to testify publicly.” Mind you, the DA doesn’t even say they refused. The DA may be exaggerating, though it is doubtlessly true they were reluctant and the DA knows why. The ultra orthodox community harasses and intimidates victims of sex crimes committed by orthodox Jews. The intimidation is extreme. They are just like the Mafia, street gangs, and drug cartels.

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Trial pits Dominican Republic’s robust media, powerful Catholic Church

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Dominican Today

Santo Domingo.- A hearing in a slander case set for Thursday next week could set a precedent in the Dominican Republic, pitting an ever stronger and outspoken media against the powerful Catholic Church.

Catholic priest Manuel Ruiz charged five prominent journalists with slander stemming from the sexual abuse scandals caused by the late bishop Jozef Wesolowski and priest Wojciech Waldemar Gil (Padre Alberto).

For more than five hours National District 8th Penal Chamber judge Teofilo Andujar heard the indictment from prosecutors and the defense claim of persecution, which cited three previous acquittals by other courts.

The journalists Marino Zapete, Altagracia Salazar, Diana Lora, Franklin Guerrero and Juan Tomas Dottin are charged with defamation and slander, but claim a violation of their right to free expression.

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Where were Boston TV stations during church sex abuse scandal?

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Mark Shanahan GLOBE STAFF FEBRUARY 26, 2016

One of the reasons critics like “Spotlight” so well is that director Tom McCarthy’s Oscar-nominated movie doesn’t let The Boston Globe off the hook. The film, about the newspaper’s Pulitzer Prize-winning series exposing the priest sex abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church, makes it clear that the Globe could have told the story sooner. But a piece published Friday in the Columbia Journalism Review raises similar questions about Boston TV stations.

Written by Terry Ann Knopf, a longtime lecturer in the BU Journalism Department and the author of the forthcoming book, “Boston: The Golden Age of Local Television,” the piece makes the case that local TV stations looked the other way because of close ties to the church. Dan Rea, who worked for more than 30 years at WBZ-TV, much of that time covering the church, had this to say to Knopf: “In retrospect, we did not take action. We circled the wagons.”

The piece also points out that Paul LaCamera, a former Channel 5 exec, served on the board of Catholic Charities, and the late Jim Thistle, a TV news director who toiled at four Boston TV stations, was on the board of the Boston Catholic Television Center and chaired the Boston Catholic Archdiocese Synod Subcommittee on Communications. “I’ve always been very proud of my association with Catholic Charities,” LaCamera told us Friday, saying his involvement with the organization had no bearing on Channel 5’s coverage. “The issue never came up.”

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Judge rules priests not required to report alleged wrongdoing if learned during confession

LOUISIANA
The Advocate

In a long-running case involving the Roman Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge, a state judge declared unconstitutional Friday a provision of the Louisiana Chidren’s Code that requires priests — as mandatory reporters of suspected abuse — to report allegations of wrongdoing even if the information is learned confidentially in the confessional.

District Judge Mike Caldwell ruled in the case that the provision violates Father Jeff Bayhi’s constitutionally protected religious freedom rights because Bayhi would be kicked out of the Catholic Church if he ever disclosed what was said in a confession.

Bayhi and the diocese were sued in 2009 by Rebecca Mayeaux, who claims she told Bayhi in a 2008 confession — when she was 14 — that a 64-year-old parishioner of Our Lady of the Assumption Catholic Church in Clinton, where Bayhi was and remains pastor, was sexually abusing her. She alleges Bayhi told her to “sweep it under the floor and get rid of it.” The parishioner died in 2009.

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Cops probed disgraced Tasmanian ex-priest

AUSTRALIA
Mercury

PATRICK BILLINGS
Police Reporter
Mercury

A FORMER Tasmanian priest has been linked to one of Australia’s most notorious and heart-wrenching missing persons cases — the disappearance of toddler William Tyrrell.

Convicted paedophile Derek Edward Nichols, 82, has emerged as another person NSW police have interviewed in the case that continues to baffle investigators and shock the nation.

William, often pictured in his beloved Spider-Man suit, vanished from his grandmother’s home in Kendall, NSW, in September 2014 when he was three.

Nichols, a former Anglican priest, who previously lived near William’s grandmother, was convicted of indecently assaulting a boy in Tasmania in 1987.

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Judge rules in favor of priest who didn’t report allegations of sexual abuse

LOUISIANA
WBRZ

By: Brock Sues and Chris Nakamoto

BATON ROUGE – Judge Mike Caldwell ruled a part of the state’s children’s code requiring priests to be mandatory reporters of abuse that they learn during “priviledged conversations,” is unconstitutional today. The ruling means Priests don’t have to speak up if they learn children are the victims of abuse during confessions.

This is a topic that centers around a case nearly ten years old. Rebecca Mayeux claims she told Father Jeffrey Bayhi about abuse she endured at the hands of church parishioner, George Charlet Junior. She claims that happened when she was 14-years-old during a confession.

After today’s ruling, Father Bayhi exited the courthouse and called the Judge’s ruling a win.

“We’re just very happy when the court upholds religious liberties, they did that today so we’re very pleased,” Father Bayhi said.

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Lawsuit on Labrador residential schools postponed, talks on settlement continue

CANADA
Metro

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The lawsuit alleging abuse of residential school survivors in Labrador has been postponed as the parties continue to discuss an out-of-court settlement.

A news release from lawyer Ches Crosbie on Friday afternoon says progress has been made, but moving discussions through the federal process is complex.

The lawsuit alleges abuse and cultural losses at residential schools in Labrador.

The roughly 1,200 aboriginal plaintiffs were excluded from then-prime minister Stephen Harper’s apology in 2008.

They also didn’t receive part of a related compensation package that paid more than $4 billion to former students of aboriginal residential schools across the rest of Canada.

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National–Details on leafleting events re Spotlight & perp lists tomorrow & Sunday

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Saturday, February 27 Events

San Jose

San Jose Diocesan headquarters, 1150 North First Street, San Jose, CA 95112

Saturday, February 27 at 11:00 am

Contact: Melanie Jula Sakoda 925-708-6175 melanie.sakoda@gmail.com, Tim Lennon 415-312-5820 tlennon@snapnetwork.org

Houston

Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, 1111 St. Joseph Parkway

Saturday, February 28 at 5:45 pm

Contact: John Sloan jsloan77@me.com 903-738-7444

Washington DC

Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, 400 Michigan Avenue NW

Saturday, February 27 at 5:45 pm

Contact: Barbra Graber barbragraber@gmail.com 540-214-8874, Bill Casey, b13909@comcast.net 703-568-3438

Saint Louis

St. Louis Cathedral, 4431 Lindell (near Taylor)

Saturday, February 27 at 5:30 pm

Contact: David Clohessy, davidgclohessy@gmail.com 314-566-9790

Sunday, February 28 Events

Oakland

Oakland Cathedral of Christ the Light, 2121 Harrison Street

Sunday, February 28 at 11:00 am

Contact: Melanie Jula Sakoda 925-708-6175 cell, melanie.sakoda@gmail.com, Tim Lennon 415-312-5820, tlennon@SNAPnetwork.org

Los Angeles

Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels, 555 W Temple Street

Sunday, February 28 at 10:45 am

Contact Barbara Blaine, 312-399-4747 bblaine@SNAPnetwork.org

Dallas

Cathedral of the Shrine of the Virgin of Guadalupe, 2215 Ross Avenue

Sunday, February 28 at 12:45 pm

Contact Carolyn Sellers

Washington DC

Cathedral of St. Matthew, 1725 Rhode Island Avenue NW

Sunday, February 28 at 12:15

Contact: Barbra Graber, barbragraber@gmail.com 540-214-8874, Bill Casey, b13909@comcast.net 703-568-3438

Miami

Cathedral of St. Mary, 7525 NW 2nd Avenue

Sunday, February 28 at 12:30 pm

Contact: Barbara Dorris bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org 314-503-0003, Charles Bailey clb747@yahoo.com 315-657-5073

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Former D.C. police officer, pastor sentenced for sex crimes

WASHINGTON (DC)
WTOP

By Neal Augenstein | @AugensteinWTOP
February 26, 2016

WASHINGTON — A federal judge sentencing a former D.C. police officer and pastor was barely controlling his anger at Darrell Best, who pleaded guilty to producing child pornography and sexually abusing two teenage girls.

“I have a hard time understanding how a man of God, when two girls come for help, your response is to have sex with them,” said U.S. District Court Judge Reggie Walton, his tone rising in disbelief.

Walton sentenced Best to 18 years at Butner federal prison, where he will get treatment designed for sexual offenders. When Best gets out of prison, he will be on supervised release for the rest of his life, and be required to register as a sex offender.

Best apologized to his victims, who were not present in the courtroom.

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Ex-D.C. police officer and pastor sentenced in sexual abuse of two teens

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

By Spencer S. Hsu February 26

A federal judge on Friday sentenced a former D.C. police officer and pastor to 18 years in prison for sexually abusing two teenage girls who attended his Southeast Washington church.

Darrell Best, 46, a 25-year D.C. police department veteran, pleaded guilty in October to one count of first-degree sexual abuse of a minor, one count of second-degree sexual abuse of a minor and one count of production of child pornography after he photographed one of the girls.

U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton handed down the sentence. Best admitted to separately abusing the girls, ages 16 and 17: one at his office at D.C. police headquarters and the other at his God-A Second Chance Ministry Church. One teen’s parents alerted police after the girl was confronted by Best’s fiancee, who found pictures of one of the victims on the officer’s phone, according to charging documents.

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More priests being investigated

MINNESOTA
Advocate Tribune

By Scott Tedrick
News Editor

Posted Feb. 26, 2016

It was back in 2010 that a CNN Special Report used Granite Falls as the setting for a story involving an 82 year old priest, Francis Markey, who died in jail in 2012 while facing charges of raping a 15-year-old boy in Ireland 40 years ago.

According to a statement issued then by the New Ulm Diocese, Markey filled in at St. Andrews Catholic Church in Granite Falls during an approximately three month period during the spring of 1982. Over those three months, a community’s worst fears would be realized as CNN would bring to light the voice of an anonymous local resident living across the street from the church alleged that he was abused by Markey as a child.

This past week the story grew significantly more alarming as parishioners of St. Andrews Church received two additional letters signed by New Ulm Diocese Bishop John Levoir, dated February 5 and February 11, informing them of two other priests with a history of sexual abuse were assigned to the parish back-to-back during the 60s and early 70s.

The letters name Fr. Gordon Buckley, who served at the Church of St. Andrews in Granite Falls and the Church of St. James in Dawson, from 1963-69, as well as Fr. Charles Stark who was at St. Andrews from 1969-1971.

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Where were Boston’s TV stations during the Church sex abuse scandal?

MASSACHUSETTS
Columbia Journalism Review

By Terry Ann Knopf

FEBRUARY 26, 2016

ONE OF THE BEST THINGS ABOUT SPOTLIGHT, Tom McCarthy’s acclaimed film about The Boston Globe’s investigation of the city’s clerical sex abuse scandal, is its integrity. Vying for six Academy Awards in Sunday’s Academy Awards ceremony, the film chronicles The Globe’s crucial role in bringing the issue of abuse to light and exposing Cardinal Bernard Law’s part in the cover-up. The film also points the finger at The Globe itself for having been so late in coming to the scandal. More than once in the film, a question is posed to the reporters: “What took you so long?”

But what about the other media outlets at the time? Where were Boston’s crackerjack TV stations—especially the two dominant ones, Channel 4 (WBZ-TV) and Channel 5 (WCVB-TV), which, for many years, were regarded as the two finest in the country? Where were all the TV reporters?

Dan Rea, a former TV reporter who covered the Church, was among the town’s most versatile and tenacious reporters during his 31-year career with WBZ-TV. Referring to the sex abuse scandal, he said: “In retrospect, we did not take action. We (reporters) circled the wagons.”

At its core, Boston was a little too small, too inbred and incestuous. Though hundreds of heinous crimes were committed by pedophile priests against innocent children over the years, there was a collective silence in Boston and throughout the state. People wouldn’t talk; the Church wouldn’t act; and the media, including local TV stations, were nowhere to be found.

Part of the problem was cultural. Sexual abuse was among the taboos people rarely talked about, in Boston or anywhere. The idea that a man of God would violate an innocent child was beyond belief. For the victims and their families, denial was often the only way of coping.

Simple numbers were another factor. Catholics have long since made up the state’s largest religious group—53 percent in 1980. And, while falling to 44.9 percent as of 2010 (the last time a religious census was taken), Catholics are still the majority religion in the state.

Then there was the Bernard Law factor. Arriving in Boston in 1984 to replace the late Cardinal Humberto Medeiros, Law proved a more dynamic and ambitious figure than his predecessor—not only as a religious leader, but as an influential member of the establishment, dining regularly with Billy Bulger, the powerful Massachusetts Senate president. But his ties went far beyond state politics. As WBUR-FM reporter David Boeri, who covered the Catholic Church for years, said: “Here was a Cardinal in Boston who had Karl Rove on his speed dial. He was really wired to Washington.” …

With the lack of urgency operating at so many levels, it wasn’t until May 7, 1992, that Joe Bergantino, head of the WBZ-TV’s investigative unit, became the first reporter to expose an ex-priest named James Porter. Bergantino’s exposé and follow-up reporting became Boston’s first pedophile priest legal case, the first of many, with Porter sentenced to 18 to 20 years in a maximum prison.

Bergantino, now retired from the nonprofit New England Center for Investigative Reporting at Boston University, recently reflected on the media’s attitude of “see no evil, hear no evil” and, above all, “report no evil” at the time: “The Church was covered, in both print and television, the way we covered a sports team. When Rose Kennedy died, we brought in a priest to do the play-by-play at her Mass. The Church wasn’t covered the way we would cover the government … . And, because the Church was not transparent at the time, it was like covering the Kremlin.”

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Former seminarian indicted, pleads not guilty to child sex crime charges

OHIO
NBC4i

[with video]

COLUMBUS (WCMH)–Joel Wright, a former student at a Columbus seminary, was formally charged Wednesday in Southern California on charges he attempted to travel out of the country to rape underage children.

A grand jury indicted Wright on one count of attempting to cross state lines “with intent to engage in a sexual act with a person who had not attained the age of 12 years,” and a count of traveling, and attempting to travel, from Ohio to California and Mexico “for the purpose of engaging in any illicit sexual conduct with another person.”

Wright was arraigned on the charges Thursday and pleaded not guilty.

He could face up to 30 years and a fine for each individual charge. His mother, Teresa Poquette, did not want to comment but said her son was innocent.

In a criminal complaint filed last month, a special agent with the Department of Homeland Security said Wright engaged in frequent email communications, indicating his interest in sexually assaulting children between the ages of one and four.

Wright was also ordered by the grand jury to forfeit property, including two cell phones.

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Archdiocese receives allegation of abuse against religious order priest

MARYLAND
The Catholic Review

February 12, 2016

The Archdiocese of Baltimore released the following statement Feb. 12.

The Archdiocese of Baltimore has learned of an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Father Jorge Antonio Velez-Lopez, T.C., 60, a member of the religious order known as the Tertiary Capuchins, who last served in the archdiocese in 2010. The alleged abuse began approximately in 2007 while Father Velez was assigned to St. John the Evangelist Parish in Columbia. The alleged victim was a parishioner at Resurrection of Lord in Laurel.

The allegation was immediately reported to civil authorities in Howard County, to the superior of Father Velez’s religious order, and to the Diocese of Alexandria, La., where Father Velez has most recently been serving.

After receiving permission from civil authorities, a representative of the archdiocese traveled to the Diocese of Alexandria to meet with Father Velez to discuss the allegations. At the meeting Feb. 11, Father Velez admitted to the allegations. The Archdiocese of Baltimore reminded Father Velez that he is not permitted to function as a priest or to minister in any capacity in the archdiocese. His authority to act as a priest in the archdiocese ended when he left service here in 2010. In accordance with archdiocesan policy, counseling assistance has been offered to all those affected.

Father Velez began working in the Archdiocese of Baltimore in July 2002 and served at St. John from 2003 to 2010. During this time he also ministered to members of the Spanish-speaking community in several other parishes, including Church of the Resurrection in Laurel, Holy Trinity in Glen Burnie, St. John the Evangelist Church in Frederick, Sacred Heart Church in Glyndon, and St. Joseph Church in Cockeysville

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Archdiocese Investigates Allegations Against Former Priest

MARYLAND
CBS Baltimore

BALTIMORE (WJZ) — The Archdiocese of Baltimore reports that a priest has admitted to allegations of abuse more than six years after it began.

According to The Catholic Review, an Archdiocese of Baltimore publication, the sexual abuse against a minor began in 2007 while now 60-year-old Jorge Antonio Velez-Lopez was assigned to St. John the Evangelist Parish in Columbia.

The alleged victim was a parishioner at Resurrection of Lord in Laurel.

The allegation was reported to local authorities in Howard County as well as to the superior father of Velez’s religious order and to the Diocese of Alexandria, La. where he was recently serving.

He last served in the archdiocese in 2010.

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Christian Brother Edward Courtney

UNITED STATES
Christian Brothers Sex Abuse – Pfau Cochran Vertetis Amala PLLC

Over the past eight years we have helped more than 20 men who survived abuse by Edward Courtney. This page describes a small amount of the evidence we have uncovered during those eight years.

Brother Manning: “I Recommend Him Highly”

Ed Courtney was removed from St. Laurence High School in 1974 because he was molesting students. Brother John Manning was the principal of St. Laurence at the time, and when we deposed Brother Courtney, he described how Brother Manning “called me in to talk, and he said there had been complaints and basically told me I was going to have to leave at that time.”

A year later, after the Christian Brothers transferred Courtney to O’Dea High School in Seattle (see below), the same Brother Manning wrote a formal letter of recommendation for Courtney so he could get his teaching certificate in Washington: “I recommend him highly.”

Edward Courtney: Assignments and Transfers

The Christian Brothers transferred Edward Courtney between at least six separate schools in New York, Illinois, Michigan, and Washington because he was abusing children and they knew he wouldn’t stop. Between the early 1960s and 1978, they transferred him between Sacred Heart in New York, then Brother Rice High School in Chicago, then Brother Rice High School in Michigan, then Leo High School in Chicago, then St. Laurence High School in Chicago, and then O’Dea High School in Seattle.

They then helped make him the principal of St. Alphonsus school in Seattle, where he was removed after one year because he kept abusing children. After they finally removed him from their private school system, the Christian Brothers wrote him letters of recommendation so he could continue teaching in public schools, where he kept abusing children for nearly another decade.

While we have many documents that reflect this egregious disregard for children, you can read one of the key documents that summarizes Edward Courtney’s transfers.

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National– Victims demand perp priest lists

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Feb. 26

For more info: David Clohessy 314 645 5915 home, 314 566 9790 cell, davidgclohessy@gmail.com, Barbara Dorris 314 503 0003, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org, Barbara Blaine 312 399 4747, bblaine@SNAPnetwork.org

Victims demand perp priest lists
Last year, 6 Catholic institutions in Minnesota did this
Last month, Seattle archbishop released 77 predators’ names
Another may do so next month; 30 bishops have taken this step
SNAP: “But at least 2,800 accused priests’ names remain hidden”
Group says some still are still near kids now as teachers, therapists, etc.
“Spotlight is still needed until church officials ‘come clean,’” victims feel

In fliers handed out this weekend to parishioners and in letters to the heads of the 20 largest US Catholic dioceses, clergy sex abuse victims will urge bishops to disclose the names of 2,800 accused predator priests whose identities they say are still hidden. They will also commend 30 prelates who have posted pedophile priests on their websites, urge employers and neighbors to “google search” ex-priests they know, and push for statute of limitations reform so more predators are exposed.

“We’re grateful for the attention being paid to the film ‘Spotlight,’ said SNAP outreach director Barbara Dorris. “But even now, US bishops are hiding the names of 43% of the accused predator priests. So clearly more ‘spotlights’ need to be shown on those who commit and conceal these heinous crimes so that kids can be protected.”

The events will take place this Saturday and Sunday on sidewalks outside churches in at least these cities: New York City, Dallas, Houston, Miami, San Jose, Oakland, LA/Orange County, Washington DC and St. Louis.

Last month, the Seattle Catholic archdiocese released a list of 77 child molesting clerics who worked there.

[OregonLive]

Over the last year or two, seven Minnesota-based church institutions did likewise (St. John’s Abbey, the Crosier Fathers, the St. Paul/Minneapolis Archdiocese and the dioceses of Crookston, Duluth, St. Cloud and Winona).

Next month, Yakima’ bishop may do the same.

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Church officials should fight perv priests and oppression, not fight the Girl Scouts

ST. LOUIS (MO)
New York Daily News

BY GERSH KUNTZMAN NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Friday, February 26, 2016

News item: The Archdiocese of St. Louis has come out swinging against (wait for it!) the Girl Scouts.

The Girl Scouts, huh? The same badge-earning, cookie-selling, wholesome Americans who have been “helping girls discover their strengths, passions, and talents” for 104 years?

In a Feb. 18 letter to parishioners, Archbishop Robert Carlson accused the Scouts of “a troubling pattern of behavior” that includes “promotion of abortion rights” and “role models in conflict with Catholic values, such as Gloria Steinem and Betty Friedan,” support for “Amnesty International (and) OxFam,” “sex education,” and “inclusion of transgender and homosexual issues.”

The Girl Scouts, he concluded are “becoming increasingly incompatible with our Catholic values (and) the total well-being of our young women.”

Carlson has a point, I guess. His diocese has long had a different approach to the well-being of kids. In 2004, the Archdiocese settled 18 of 48 lawsuits against perv priests.

Two years ago, it settled another case against a priest who allegedly raped a girl for four years, starting when she was 5 years old.

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What did George Pell know about these paedophiles when he was leading the Melbourne archdiocese?

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher, article updated 26 February 2016

Since 1993, Broken Rites has been doing research about how Melbourne’s Catholic bishops harboured a number of sexually-abusive priests. In the mid-1990s, Broken Rites began exposing these priests. Now some of these priests, from the Broken Rites list, are being investigated by Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission. This article will point you to the original Broken Rites research about each of these priests.

Here are some of the names from the Broken Rites list (to read a Broken Rites article on each priest, you can click on any of the following names).

* Fr Peter Searson. For many years, the Melbourne church hierarchy knew that Searson was committing sexual offences against children in parish schools but it managed to protect him from police prosecution. Obstinately the church kept him in the ministry but eventually the hierarchy was forced to put Searson on “administrative leave” to protect the public image of the church.

* Fr Wilfred (Bill) Baker. Baker worked in parishes around Melbourne — and he committed sexual crimes against children while his superiors and colleagues looked the other way.

* Fr Nazareno Fasciale (pronounced Fah-SHAH-lay). Church leaders, including George Pell, participated in a glowing tribute to this priest, who was one of the worst paedophiles in the Melbourne diocese. In 1996, when Broken Rites exposed this (and other) church cover-ups, George Pell’s diocese went into damage control, hiring a public relations firm to announce the “Melbourne Response” (a forerunner of the church’s “Towards Healing” strategy).

* Fr Kevin O’Donnell. During O’Donnell’s life of crime, his superiors and colleagues looked the other way. In his final years, he even received public praise from one of his superiors, Bishop George Pell.

* Fr Ronald Pickering. The Melbourne church authorities protected Pickering for many years while he committed crimes against children in his parishes. Eventually he fled from Australia, evading justice. The Melbourne archdiocese then began sending retirement payments to Pickering at his new address in England but they didn’t give this address to the police.

* Fr David Daniel. The church authorities kept ignoring complaints about the crimes of this priest, but eventually some of these victims spoke to Victoria Police detectives — and the police then charged Father Daniel, thus ending the church’s cover-up.

* Fr Desmond Gannon. This is another example of how the church authorities protected a criminal priest for many years until some of his victims eventually spoke to Victoria Police detectives.

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The point in the film Spotlight that had me in tears

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 26, 2016

Joanne McCarthy

Gold Walkley-winning Fairfax journalist Joanne McCarthy, whose reporting of church abuse cover-ups sparked the royal commission, reveals the moment in the movie Spotlight that left her in tears.

About the time Cardinal George Pell sits in a chair in the Hotel Quirinale in Rome on Monday to give evidence about his knowledge of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, celebrities will be climbing into limousines in Hollywood to attend the 88th Academy Awards.

Leonardo DiCaprio will be there, for his role in the violent historic action film The Revenant. George Clooney will be there too, because the Academy Awards wouldn’t be the Academy Awards without him.

Someone will wear Prada. Someone else will wear Tom Ford or Armani, Versace, Donna Karan, Calvin Klein or Dolce & Gabbana, and a few will be pilloried for looking a fright.

Tom McCarthy (no relation) will be there, nominated for best director and best original screenplay for his film Spotlight, about the Boston Globe’s exposure of systemic child sexual abuse and cover-ups within the Catholic diocese of Boston from a first article on January 6, 2002.

Pell will probably have finished giving evidence, in Rome, to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse sitting in Sydney, when the best picture nominees are read out in Hollywood on Monday afternoon, Sydney time – a list that includes Spotlight. …

Watching Spotlight was like watching my life for the past 10 years.

The similarities were striking.

The Boston Globe editor Marty Baron, who initiated the investigation into the church’s handling of one paedophile priest, John Geoghan, was an outsider – a Miami Jew in a Catholic baseball-mad city.

I was, and remain, an outsider – a woman writing from home on the NSW Central Coast, 90 kilometres from Newcastle about the blokey Hunter Region. The outsider view was essential in both cases; to see with fresh eyes a culture linked with the church by tradition, where so many people in prominent positions grew up within the church.

I’ve met so many people like the victim and victim’s advocate Phil Saviano who spoke to the Boston Globe journalists. Saviano had documents to prove what he was saying, but he was labelled crazy because of his desperate passion for someone to see the church through the eyes of a survivor – not what the church said, but what it actually did behind closed doors.

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Tim Minchin thanks supporters and lashes out at Cardinal Pell following

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

AUSTRALIAN composer Tim Minchin has said Cardinal George Pell should “get on his knees and wash [the] feet” of the sexual abuse survivors travelling to Rome to meet him.

In a post on his Facebook page following the release of his song Come Home Cardinal Pell, the brains behind musical Matilda thanked the generosity of those who had bought the song and donated funds to survivors of abuse carried out by those within the church.

“I personally believe it would be appropriate for him to get on his knees and wash their feet,” he wrote.

“I have great admiration for the survivors and their loved ones who have campaigned for years to have their voices heard. They have fought against a hugely wealthy institution that has a vested interest in quieting and discrediting them.”

“To the many survivors of abuse from all over the country who have written to me since the song came out, thank you so much for taking the time. Your messages have made me smile and cry … and feel just so angry for you. Please know that you are heard.”

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Church files searched after George Pell abuse claim

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Chip Le Grand
Victorian Chief Reporter
Melbourne

Victoria Police have searched church records kept by a parish in Melbourne’s west as part of an investigati­on into sex-abuse claims against cardinal George Pell dating back 55 years.

Father Rene Ramirez, whose Maidstone patch includes the old Braybrook parish, confirmed to The Weekend Australian that a police detective visited his pres­by­tery late last year to inspect surviving documents from the 1960s.

The search relates to an allegation first made against Cardinal Pell 16 years ago, when a former Braybrook altar boy accused Australia’s most senior Catholic of ­repeatedly molesting him at a church-run holiday camp at Phillip Island in either 1961 or 1962.

Cardinal Pell, nicknamed “Big George’’ by boys at the camp, was at the time a teenage seminarian at Corpus Christi College in Werri­bee, southwest of Melbourne. The allegation was examined and not upheld after a church disciplinary hearing before retired Supreme Court judge Alec Southwell.

The confidential hearing was conducted over five days in ­November 2002, with witnesses providing evidence under oath. An unpublished transcript of the proceeding has been made available to Victoria Police’s Sano taskforce, responsible for investigating historic­ and new claims of instit­utional child abuse.

In a finely balanced judgment, Mr Southwell found the complainant “gave the impression that he was speaking honestly from an actual recollection’’ but he weighed against this the historic nature of the allegations, “valid criticisms’’ of the complainant’s credibility, a lack of corroborative evidence and Cardinal Pell’s sworn denials.

“I find I am not satisfied that the complaint has been established,’’ the retired judge concluded.

The former altar boy who made the allegation, now a 67-year-old ­retired unionist and waterside worker who battled alcohol addiction and spent time in prison for drug offences, does not resile from his story about what happened at the summer camp.

However, when contacted by The Weekend Australian this week, he said he had not spoken to police and had no interest in reviving his claims against Cardinal Pell, who will provide further testimony to the child abuse royal commission from Rome next week.

It is understood that a focus of the police investigation is tracking down other former altar boys who attended the camp. About 42 boys attended from the Braybrook parish in 1961 and more the following year. Father Ramirez, who recently joined the Maidstone parish from The Philippines, said many Braybrook records from that ­period had been destroyed in a fire.

The potentially most important witness, a former altar boy and friend of the complainant named Michael Foley, died in a bar fight 17 years before the Southwell hearing. The complainant told the hearing that Foley was also molested by Cardinal Pell at the camp.

Another former altar boy, referred to as Mr Fitzgerald, told the hearing Foley warned him at the camp to “watch out for big George­”. Mr Southwell called Mr Fitzgerald a “patently honest witness’’ and accepted his evidence, against the objections of Car­dinal Pell’s barrister Jeff Sher QC.

Cardinal Pell, in a pre-emptive statement issued last Friday as the Herald Sun newspaper was preparing to publish details of a Sano taskforce investigation into multiple­ abuse claims against him, repeatedly described the Phillip Islan­d allegations as false.

“The Southwell report which exonerated Cardinal Pell has been in the public domain since 2002,’’ a statement released by Cardinal Pell’s office reads.

“The Victorian police have taken no steps in all of that time to pursue the false allegations made, however, the cardinal certainly has no objection to them reviewing the materials that led Justice Southwell to exonerate him. The cardinal is certain that the police will quickly reach the conclusio­n that the allegations are false.’’

Mr Southwell’s 15-page judgment makes no finding that the allegat­ions were false.

A lawyer involved in the 2002 hearing yesterday said the complainant presented as sincere.

“The complainant might have been mistaken, and he was testing his memory from a long way back, but he wasn’t making it up,’’ he said.

The character of the complainant came under sustained attack before and during the in-camera hearing, with supporters of the then Sydney archbishop leaking details of his criminal history to journalists.

Despite the complainant’s history as an illegal bookmaker, Painters and Dockers organiser and convicted criminal who served two years in jail for trafficking amphetamines, Mr Southwell did not believe he was a liar.

He at no point sought any form of payment from the church and ­despite “extensive inquiries’’ made on behalf of Cardinal Pell, no evidence of an ulterior motive was uncovered.

He confided in his wife in the mid-1970s about the alleged Phillip Island abuse, telling her he had been interfered with by “a big bastard called George’’.

The church ­became aware of the allegation 25 years later, after the complainant told his story to victims support group Broken Rites. The church referred the complaint to its national committee for professional standards. Due to the seriousness of the allegations, Mr Southwell applied a standard of proof comparable to that used in criminal trials.

Mr Sher told the hearing that an adverse finding “would be nothing short of disastrous’’ for Cardinal Pell and the church.

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The Real ‘Spotlight’: Meet Team That Inspired the Oscar-Nominated Film

UNITED STATES
ABC News

By MICHAEL ROTHMAN DAVID MILLER Feb 26, 2016

Note: This interview was conducted with past and present members of the Boston Globe Spotlight team, who were featured in the Oscar-nominated film “Spotlight.” Mike Rezendes, Walter Robinson and Sacha Pfeiffer are all still at The Globe and allowed ABC News access into the old Spotlight offices. Other members of the team and past members of Globe management not interviewed for this piece included Marty Baron, Ben Bradlee, Jr. and Matt Carroll, who made invaluable contributions to the story depicted in the 2015 film and over the years at The Globe.

It’s a little after 3 p.m. on a Wednesday as a clock ticks on the far wall of a dimly lit office off Morrissey Boulevard in Boston.

The room is a mess, it smells like mildew and there are old, yellowed newspapers everywhere sprawled out on rickety desks and the dirty floor. But there’s something else in this unassuming room that can’t be more than 400 to 500 square feet in size — there’s history, and lots of it.

As Sacha Pfeiffer sits upright in an old chair yanked from the manager’s unmanned office, where all the odds and ends have been tossed into, she flashes a knowing smile.

There’s something unique about her, and about Michael Rezendes and Walter Robinson — something you can’t quite put your finger on immediately.

Standing there in this tiny, cluttered room, having spoken with these journalists from the Boston Globe for more than five hours already, you’d never know this is where the iconic Spotlight team sat for years, where they most likely saved countless lives and helped even more people in their community with their research and reporting.

It’s a humble bunch, more so than you’d expect from Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists, who were just featured in an Oscar-nominated movie, boasting the likes of Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams and Michael Keaton.

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Brooklyn rabbi charged with sexually abusing teenage boys gets just 60 DAYS in prison and six years probation

NEW YORK
Daily Mail (UK)

By ANTON NILSSON FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

A Brooklyn rabbi accused of sexually assaulting several teenage boys was sentenced on Tuesday to 60 days in jail and six years on probation.

In 2013, Yoel Malik was charged with the sexual assault of four boys aged between 13 and 16.
He pleaded guilty of luring a child and sexual misconduct the following year, the New York Daily News reported Thursday.

As part of the plea deal, Malik, 36, underwent a sex offender class and other probation requirements, and the felony count of luring a child was subsequently dismissed, according to the Daily News.

Malik’s victims were students at the now-closed Satmar yeshiva in Borough Park, Brooklyn.
The rabbi was accused of fondling the boys and allegedly forced two of them to perform oral sex on him.

A Brooklyn hotel manager said he admitted Malik and a ‘tall boy’ into a room in January 2013, where the pair allegedly stayed for eight hours, according to Pix 11.

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EXCLUSIVE: Brooklyn rabbi charged with teen sex assault gets 60 days in jail; DA ripped for offering light plea deal

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY REUVEN BLAU NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Updated: Friday, February 26, 2016

A Brooklyn rabbi charged with sexually abusing four teenage boys in a hotel was sentenced to just 60 days in jail and six years of probation.

Yoel Malik, 33, a member of the Satmar Hasidic sect, was given the generous plea deal after the victims were extremely reluctant to testify publicly, according to a law enforcement source familiar with the case.

In 2013, Malik was charged with 28 criminal counts and shamelessly blamed his underage victims for trying to seduce him, police sources said.

The boys were all students at Ohr Hameir, a now-shuttered Satmar yeshiva in Borough Park. The alleged victims were between 13 and 16 when the incidents occurred.

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Kriste Mambo priest commits suicide

ZIMBABWE
Manica Post

Lovemore Kadzura

THE Roman Catholic Church trainee priest who allegedly indecently assaulted a 17-year-old Kriste Mambo High School student during a church service committed suicide last week. Tatenda Brandon Masenga (23) who was a Carmalite brother at the institution took his life last Thursday in Marondera where he was staying at Plot Number 15, Esseydale Farm as part of his bail condition which barred him from residing at the school until the case was finalised.

Masenga who was in his sixth year was left with only a year to complete his priesthood studies, but his world crumbled after he was arrested in connection with the embarrassing charge of indecently assaulting an Upper Six student during a church service. Masenga is said to have gulped an unknown poison and died upon admission at Marondera Provincial Hospital.

His lawyer, Mr Leonard Chigadza told The Manica Post that Masenga looked very calm and composed when he engaged him. Mr Chigadza further added that from what Masenga had told him as his defence, the State’s case was weak and there were high prospects of an acquittal.

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Former Catholic priest Robert Flaherty granted bail while he appeals 1970s and 1980s child sex convictions

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Stephanie Dalzell

A former New South Wales Catholic priest has been granted bail while he appeals against his convictions for child sex offences.

Robert Flaherty, 72, assaulted three boys aged between 11 and 15, in Sydney, and on the New South Wales south coast during the 1970s and 1980s.

However, he was only arrested in 2013 after the third victim complained to police.

Flaherty pleaded guilty to three counts of indecent assault but was also found guilty by a jury of two similar offences last September.

Flaherty was yesterday sentenced to two years and three weeks in prison, with a six-month non-parole period.

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Church wrong on abuse: Rome-bound victims

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Cardinal George Pell needs to acknowledge the Catholic Church got it wrong in handling child sex abuse by clergy, survivors say.

Ballarat-born Cardinal Pell should be leading church efforts to help victims, particularly in the Victorian regional city, Ballarat clergy abuse survivor Philip Nagle said.

“George is the one that should be standing up and saying ‘hey we got this wrong and this is what we’re going to do to fix it’,” Mr Nagle told AAP.

“Being the third most powerful person in the church, he has the power to do that.”

Mr Nagle is among a group of 15 survivors headed to Rome to be there when Cardinal Pell gives evidence about widespread abuse by clergy in the Diocese of Ballarat and the Melbourne archdiocese.

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Tim Minchin tells Cardinal George Pell to ‘get on his knees’ and wash child sex abuse survivors’ feet as they fly to Rome to hear his testimony to the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By MATT OGILVIE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

British-Australian comedian Tim Minchin has penned another scathing piece directed at Cardinal George Pell.

In a letter published by The West Australian, Minchin praised the generosity of the Australian public who helped fund fifteen Australian child sex abuse survivors to fly to Rome to listen to Cardinal Pell give evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse.

‘These incredibly brave men and women will sit in a room with George Pell while he gives evidence via video-link to the Royal Commission. We hope that he will look them in the eye and tell them everything he knew.

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‘Sauna Rabbi’ Jonathan Rosenblatt Quits Post At Bronx Synagogue

NEW YORK
The Jewish Week

JTA

Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt, the New York spiritual leader who has been under fire for having sauna chats with boys in his congregation, reportedly has resigned from his Bronx synagogue.

Rosenblatt told the Riverdale Jewish Center on Wednesday that he will step down as senior rabbi, the Times of Israel reported Thursday. He has served in the post since 1985.

The decision was announced in an email letter sent to the synagogue membership on Wednesday evening signed by the synagogue’s president, Samson Fine, the Israel-based news website reported.

“Rabbi Rosenblatt has today informed RJC’s leadership that he intends to step aside from the Senior Rabbinate of the RJC,” the email read, according to the Times of Israel. “The Shul’s Board of Trustees was informed at this evening Board meeting and we anticipate discussing transition details the Board in the next two weeks.”

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IN SAUNA-GATE REVERSAL, RIVERDALE RABBI STEPS DOWN

NEW YORK
Tablet Magazine

By Sara Ivry
February 25, 2016

Jonathan Rosenblatt, the 59-year-old Orthodox rabbi who showered and took saunas with male congregants as young as 12 in the 1980s and 90s—a revelation that came to the fore last spring in a New York Times article—has announced that he’s leaving his pulpit at the well-to-do Riverdale Jewish Center.

This is a reversal of his decision of last summer to stay put in the face of calls to step down. At that time, Rosenblatt, the husband of a descendant of the Twersky and Soloveitchik dynasties and a great-grandson of the celebrated cantor Yossele Rosenblatt, apologized for his behavior.

“This is a crisis created by my own lapses of judgment,” the Times reported he said. “I have brought pain to people, shame to my family and I have caused a desecration of the divine name.” Contrition notwithstanding, he was said to think the demand for his resignation was disproportionate to what he’d done.

Many community members agreed and came to Rosenblatt’s defense, claiming that he served as a mentor to the boys in question and had engaged in meaningful conversations with them. Some 200 congregants signed a petition that he stay in place. Unsurprisingly, others found his behavior reprehensible, and left the synagogue in protest. According to the Times, at least half of the shul’s 700 members have defected; some have formed a break-away congregation, the Riverdale Minyan.

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Bronx Rabbi Who Had Sauna Chats Is Quitting

NEW YORK
New York Times

By ANDY NEWMAN
FEB. 25, 2016

The prominent senior rabbi of a Bronx synagogue who drew scrutiny for having naked sauna chats with boys as young as 12 is stepping down.

The rabbi, Jonathan Rosenblatt, had fought hard to keep his job at the Riverdale Jewish Center after the publication of an article in The New York Times in May describing the sauna sessions, and many congregants rallied to his defense.

But hundreds of other members quit in anger over Rabbi Rosenblatt’s conduct and the synagogue leadership’s tolerance of it, forming a breakaway congregation.

The Riverdale Jewish Center, a Modern Orthodox congregation in the affluent neighborhood of Riverdale, has lost more than half its members since last year.

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Tim Minchin says George Pell should wash feet of child sex abuse survivors

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Musician and comedian Tim Minchin says Cardinal George Pell should show contrition to survivors of child sexual abuse and “get on his knees and wash their feet” when he attends a public hearing of the royal commission in Rome on Monday.

Michin made the call in a statement posted on his website and comes after the viral success of his song, Come Home (Cardinal Pell), which has been viewed more than a million times since it was first performed on Channel Ten’s The Project.

A group of roughly 15 survivors and their supporters, including counsellors, will make their way to Rome on Saturday to attend the public hearing at the Hotel Quirinale, where Australia’s most senior Catholic is due to give evidence to the royal commission.

In the statement, Minchin says: “Even if his only crime was willful blindness, a personal act of acknowledgement and contrition from this man is profoundly important for survivors.”

Pell has consistently denied any wrongdoing. He told the royal commission in December that the Catholic church’s failure to deal with paedophile priests was shameful, but defended his own handling of abuse complaints.

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Coulsdon church minister ‘ran cult to brainwash women into bare bottom spankings as the will of God’

UNITED KINGDOM
Croydon Advertiser

By Tom Matthews | Posted: February 24, 2016

THE minister of a Coulsdon church ran a cult to brainwash women in his congregation into accepting bare bottom spankings as ‘God’s will’ to satisfy his sexual desires, a court has heard.

Howard Curtis, a married 73-year-old father of three, is said to have treated Coulsdon Christian Fellowship (CCF), of which he was the leader for decades, “more like his personal cult than a church”.

He denies at least seven sex attacks on three different women said to have taken place between 1991 and 2013.

Curtis, who became a minister of the Elim Pentecostal movement in the 1980s, but broke from the church when he was pastor of the CCF in Chipstead Valley Road, further denies child cruelty charges relating to three different youngsters, and a charge of causing actual bodily harm by spanking a babysitter.

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LAWSUIT CLAIMS SCHOOL MISHANDLED COMPLAINT OF SEXUAL CONTACT BY ACCUSED BULLY

CALIFORNIA
ABC 30

By Corin Hoggard
Thursday, February 25, 2016

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) — Disturbing accusations from parents at a Fresno school. They claim an eight-year-old bully had sexual contact with their kids and the school didn’t do anything about it. A lawsuit filed this week accuses the school of basically sweeping the problem under the rug. But administrators said they did everything right.

The St. Anthony’s Campus didn’t feel like a safe place anymore to a couple boys as of a few months ago. The seven and eight-year-olds told their parents another boy bullied them, and the trouble included comments and acts of a sexual nature. The parents took it up with school administrators, and from there, ABC30 legal analyst Tony Capozzi said two things needed to happen. “Once the school is put on notice, one, they have to notify the police, and two, they should do something to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

The parents feel neither of those things happened, so they filed a lawsuit accusing the school of negligence. Their attorney, Warren Paboojian, told Action News “The school failed to properly report it and conducted their own investigation, Which was inadequate.”

A Fresno police investigation is underway now, but how it started may be part of the lawsuit. “A parent called and it was a general complaint, possible child molest, inappropriate touching type complaint,” said Lt. Joe Gomez, Fresno Police Department.

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A MESSAGE FROM TIM MINCHIN AS ABUSE VICTIMS FLY TO SEE GEORGE PELL GIVE EVIDENCE

AUSTRALIA
Daily Review

BY DAILY REVIEW

Last week Tim Minchin caused more than a storm when he released his song Come Home (Cardinal Pell) viewed by more than one million people; he helped kickstart donations of more than $200,000 from 4,500 people for 15 victims of sexual abuse fly to Rome.

They fly out today to watch Cardinal George Pell give video-link evidence before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. He is giving evidence about about sexual abuse in the 1980s by priests in the Ballarat diocese.

Read Minchin’s unedited statement below:

***

“Many very serious questions remain about George Pell’s conduct as a leader of an institution that failed to curb decades of rampant child sexual abuse within its hallowed walls. This failure has resulted in hundreds of innocent people suffering lifelong emotional and physical damage. A shocking number have committed suicide.

Whilst his actions and appearance suggest a man in good health, Pell asserts that he is too ill to travel to Australia to answer these questions at the Royal Commission into Institutional Child Sexual Abuse.

And so today, thanks to the generosity of the Australian public, fifteen Ballarat Survivors will fly to Rome. They would not have been able to afford to do so without you.

These incredibly brave men and women will sit in a room with George Pell while he gives evidence via video-link to the Royal Commission. We hope that he will look them in the eye and tell them everything he knew.

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The girls, the paedophile and Cardinal Pell

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Australia’s worst paedophile priest, Father Gerald Ridsdale, once lived with a young clergyman who is now Cardinal George Pell. As the Cardinal prepares to give evidence to the child abuse royal commission, two women break decades of silence to tell Debi Marshall about their ordeal in Ridsdale’s care – and their disappointment with Pell.

In 1973, a young Father George Pell, flushed with success from his recent studies in Rome and Oxford, returned to his home town of Ballarat and took up residence in the St Alipius presbytery; a place, it would be publicly revealed more than 20 years later, that was a paedophile’s paradise and a child’s nightmare.

His housemate that year was the tall, rowdy and popular parish priest, Father Gerald Ridsdale.

What the parents and parishioners who worshipped God and obeyed the sanctity of the church and its messengers did not know was that from early in his priesthood, Ridsdale was subject to a psychiatric report. He was already a serial child abuser who sodomised children at will, picking them off when and where his desires dictated: in front of a church altar, at the presbytery, or on camping or fishing trips.

When he hurt them, he ignored their cries for him to stop. If they persisted in making a racket, he beat them. Badly.

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Ex-Seminarian Pleads Not Guilty to Child-Sex Charges

CALIFORNIA
Courthouse News Service

By BIANCA BRUNO

SAN DIEGO (CN) – A former Ohio seminary student charged with planning to travel to Mexico to purchase children to sexually abuse pleaded not guilty to a raft of charges in Federal Court Thursday.

Joel Alexander Wright appeared before U.S. District Magistrate Judge Bernard Skomal. He pleaded not guilty to all felony charges including aggravated sexual abuse, travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct and criminal forfeiture.

Wright faces 60 years to life in prison if found guilty on all charges, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Alessandra Serano.

Federal authorities arrested the seminarian on Jan. 29 at the San Diego International Airport following a months-long sting operation by Homeland Security Investigations agents in San Diego.

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Path of hope to Rome

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

Feb. 26, 2016

When Cardinal George Pell likened the Catholic Church’s responsibility for child abuse to that of a trucking company in his last evidence to a child sex abuse inquiry, clergy abuse survivor Peter Blenkiron clenched his teeth so tightly he cracked his tooth.

For years Mr Blenkiron, who was abused by disgraced Christian Brother Edward Dowlan when he was 11, battled suicidal thoughts playing like a stereo in his head.

He says he is one of the lucky ones. He’s still here.

But he describes himself as a broken man looking for healing.

A dark history of abuse and rape has shattered lives across the Ballarat region and Mr Blenkiron has spent years searching for the light in the midst of darkness.

“There has to be an end to this all, there has to be hope for those still struggling and future children have to be protected, always,” Mr Blenkiron said.

Mr Blenkiron said the survivors’ trip to Rome was a small step for the damaged men of Ballarat making the journey and a huge step for Australia.

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Alleged sexual abuse victims want dismissals reversed

RHODE ISLAND
Providence Journal

By Karen Lee Ziner
Journal Staff Writer

Posted Feb. 25, 2016

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — The Rhode Island Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in an appeal involving repressed memory claims of child sexual-abuse against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence. The claims brought by Helen L. (McGonigle) Hyde and Jeffrey Thomas in 2008 date to the 1960s, when they were both between 6 and 9 years old.

Hyde, of Connecticut, and Thomas, of Massachusetts, are jointly asking the court to reverse dismissal of their lawsuits against the diocese. A Superior Court judge found that the statute of limitations had elapsed.

Hyde and Thomas alleged that they were molested by the late Rev. Brendan Smyth, an Irish priest who served as pastor of Our Lady of Mercy in East Greenwich for three years. Smyth died in 1967, while serving a 12-year prison sentence in Ireland for admitted child sexual abuse.

The case in part hinges on whether repressed memory alone constitutes a form of “unsound mind”; or whether unsound mind also requires that a person be incapable of handling day-to-day affairs. The trial court determined the latter is necessary in order to stop the clock from ticking on the statute, as it relates to “non-perpetrator defendants.”

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Lawsuit claims priest sexually abused Portland boy

OREGON
KATU

BY KELLEE AZAR, KATU NEWS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26TH 2016

An Oregon man using a pseudo name of “David Smith” is suing the Dominican Order and Holy Rosary Church in Northeast Portland.

Smith was an altar boy at the time. He alleges he was sexually abused by Father Emmerich Vogt.

“He was subjected to kissing, extended hugging, touching, something no kid should have to go through, especially with a priest,” Smith’s lawyer Kristian Roggendorf of Roggendorf Law said.

Also in the complaint are allegations of graphic sexual conversations.

“That can really mess with a child’s mind having to endure that day after day, year after year. For years and it’s really something that shouldn’t have happened,” Roggendorf said.

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‘We really want to hear the truth’ – Australian abuse survivors fly to Rome

AUSTRALIA
TVNZ

A group of Australian survivors of child sex abuse by Catholic clergy are flying to Rome tonight to watch Cardinal George Pell give evidence to Australia’s abuse royal commission.

Cardinal Pell, a former Ballarat priest and Melbourne archbishop who is now in charge of the Vatican’s finances, will give evidence about the church’s handling of abuse in the Ballarat diocese and Melbourne archdiocese on Monday.

Some other survivors and the parents of victims have already arranged private flights.

“He’s worked his way right through the hierarchy right up to the top of the Catholic Church so we really want to hear the truth about what happened,” Chrissie Foster, whose daughters were abused, told the ABC at Melbourne Airport this morning.

“It’s about time we saw some action out of the Catholic Church so maybe hearing the whole truth from him we might actually start to see some action.”

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Ballarat abuse survivors head to Rome to see Cardinal George Pell give evidence

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 26, 2016

Melissa Cunningham

When Cardinal George Pell likened the Catholic Church’s responsibility for child abuse to that of a trucking company in his last evidence to a child sex abuse inquiry, clerical abuse survivor Peter Blenkiron clenched his teeth so tightly he cracked his tooth.

For years Mr Blenkiron, who was abused by disgraced Christian Brother Edward Dowlan when he was 11, battled suicidal thoughts, but he says he is one of the lucky ones. He’s still here.

Mr Blenkiron is among 14 Ballarat clerical abuse victims who will travel 16,000 kilometres to Rome this weekend to see Cardinal Pell give evidence once more to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

The survivors will be in the room at the Rome’s Hotel Qurinale where on Monday Australian time, Cardinal Pell will take the stand to give evidence about his time as an adviser to former Ballarat bishop Ronald Mulkearns.

The trip follows a national crowd-funding campaign to help the survivors bear witness to Cardinal Pell’s evidence in Rome after the inquiry accepted a medical report which said the he was at risk of heart failure if he made the journey back to Australia.

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Retired Hunter solicitor Lou Pirona speaks about the death of his son, and the road to the royal commission

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

By JOANNE MCCARTHY
Feb. 26, 2016

IT is two days before an Australian royal commission questions a cardinal in Rome about child sexual abuse, and a Hunter man is thinking about how it all started, with the death of his son.

John Pirona’s suicide in July, 2012, after he was sexually abused by Catholic priest John Denham as a child and left a final note that ended with the words “Too much pain”, was the catalyst for the Newcastle Herald’s Shine the Light campaign for a royal commission.

His father Lou Pirona accepts John’s death provided the focus for a community that said enough was enough. The loss of one life came to represent the loss of many.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is the legacy of John Pirona and the thousands of others whose childhoods were devastated, Mr Pirona said.

He will watch a royal commission live stream of Cardinal George Pell giving evidence from Rome on Monday about what he knew about child sexual abuse in the Ballarat area of Victoria.

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February 25, 2016

BGCT sexual misconduct policy replaces file with prevention

TEXAS
The Baptist Standard

February 23, 2016
By KEN CAMP / MANAGING EDITOR

DALLAS—The Baptist General Convention of Texas Executive Board voted Feb. 23 to change the convention’s focus on clergy sexual misconduct. It will implement a sexual abuse prevention program and will eliminate its confidential file of clergy charged with misdeeds.

The board will provide training opportunities and web-based resources to strengthen Texas Baptist churches’ ability to avoid clergy sexual misconduct and to extend compassion when misconduct is alleged or proven true.

Resources and training initially will focus on protection for children. Later, the scope will expand to include adult-to-adult abuse.

Grew from internal review of policy

The recommendation from the board’s administration support committee to discontinue the clergy sexual misconduct file and to expand educational resources grew from an internal review of the BGCT policy and its effectiveness, said Rollie Richmond, BGCT director of human resources.

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‘They’ll put a sick baby on a plane, but not a sick Cardinal’: Scathing church sign takes aim at the Australian government’s treatment of refugees and George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By BELINDA CLEARY FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

A church minister has taken on Cardinal George Pell and the Australian government’s treatment of refugees in one carefully worded sign.

The Melbourne Welsh Church’s Minister Sion Gough Hughes has publically questioned the government’s decision to fly refugee babies back to detention while failing to fly Cardinal Pell back to Australia to give evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

It reads; ‘Australia – where the government will try to put a sick baby on a plane, but not a sick Cardinal.’

The sign has gone viral online after being posted to Facebook on Monday.

Minister Gough Hughes told Daily Mail Australia the sign is less about Pell then it is refugees.
‘People have taken it to be about Pell, but he is innocent until proven guilty but I do believe he needs to turn up,’ he said.

‘He needs to come and tell the Royal Commission what he knows, we don’t know what he knows so that is the issue.’

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Hof van beroep verwerpt klacht van slachtoffers seksueel misbruik tegen Heilige Stoel

BELGIE
Het Nieuwsblad

[Appeal Court rejects complaint by victims of sexual abuse against the Holy See.]

GENT – De dagvaarding van de Heilige Stoel en de Belgische bisschoppen door slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik, is nietig. Dat heeft het Gentse hof van beroep donderdag beslist in een bevestiging van het vonnis van de rechtbank van eerste aanleg in Gent. Een veertigtal slachtoffers probeerde een groepsvordering in te dienen, maar krijgt opnieuw ongelijk.

De groepsvordering werd ingeleid door de advocatenassociatie Van Steenbrugge, Van Acker & Mussche en gebeurde in naam van slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik in de kerk. Het advocatenkantoor probeerde een collectieve vordering of “class action”-zaak in te stellen. De bedoeling van de klacht was om de aansprakelijkheid in hoofde van de Heilige Stoel, de Belgische bisschoppen en de hogere oversten te laten vaststellen.

Immuniteit

De eisers stelden dat ze allen slachtoffer waren van seksueel misbruik en dat ze schade leden door de nalatigheid van de kerkelijke overheid. De rechtbank van eerste aanleg in Gent besliste in 2013 dat de dagvaarding nietig was. Volgens de rechtbank kon één slachtoffer niet dagvaarden in naam van een hele groep slachtoffers en gold de immuniteit van de Heilige Stoel. Het hof van beroep in Gent oordeelde donderdag eveneens dat de Heilige Stoel staatsimmuniteit geniet en dat de vordering op “geen enkel concreet feit” gebaseerd is.

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MEDIA RELEASE – FEBRUARY 25, 2016

NEW JERSEY
Road to Recovery

Leaders of the Salesian Priests and Brothers have refused to settle a childhood sexual abuse claim against one of their priests, Fr. Joseph Maffei, SDB, causing the victim, who was abused in Indiana, to be re-victimized. The victim is being denied justice.

One of the leaders of the Salesian Priests and Brothers, who is in charge of allegations of sexual abuse against Salesian Priests and Brothers, told advocate Dr. Robert M. Hoatson several weeks ago during a demonstration at a New Jersey church that the Salesians were settling the claim of the Indiana man. There has been no settlement and no talks of settlement

What
A demonstration and leafleting alerting the media, general public, parishioners, and school parents about the refusal of the Salesian Priests and Brothers, based in New Rochelle, New York, to settle a claim of sexual abuse of a child by a member of the Salesians of Don Bosco religious order, Fr. Joseph Maffei, SDB, when he was assigned to St. Dominic Savio Juniorate in Cedar Lake, Indiana

When
Friday, February 26, 2016 from 7:00 am until 8:00 am
Friday, February 26, 2016 from 1:00 pm until 2:30 pm

Where
FROM 7:00 – 8:00 AM
On the public sidewalk outside the headquarters of the Salesians of Don Bosco religious order and Salesian High School, 148 East Main Street, New Rochelle, New York 10801

FROM 1:00 PM until 2:30 PM
On the public sidewalk outside Don Bosco Preparatory School, 492 North Franklin Turnpike, Ramsey, New Jersey 07446

Who
Members of Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit charity based in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, including its co-founder and President, Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D.

Why
The Salesians of Don Bosco religious order refuses to settle a sexual abuse claim against one of its priests, Fr. Joseph Maffei, SDB. Fr. Maffei’s victim is a former student of a Salesian Juniorate school in Indiana. One of the leaders of the Salesians told advocate Dr. Robert M. Hoatson during a demonstration at Our Lady of the Valley Church in Orange, New Jersey several weeks ago that the sexual abuse claim was being settled, yet no settlement talks have taken place since that time. Demonstrators will call on the Salesian Priests and Brothers to do the right thing, settle the sexual abuse claim of the Indiana man, and treat him fairly and justly.

Contact
Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D. – Road to Recovery, Inc. – 862-368-2800 – roberthoatson@gmail.com

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Report: Protestant Church Insurers Handle 260 Sex Abuse Cases a Year

UNITED STATES
Insurance Journal

By Rose French | June 18, 2007

The three companies that insure the majority of Protestant churches in America say they typically receive upward of 260 reports each year of young people under 18 being sexually abused by clergy, church staff, volunteers or congregation members.

The figures released to The Associated Press offer a glimpse into what has long been an extremely difficult phenomenon to pin down — the frequency of sex abuse in Protestant congregations.

Religious groups and victims’ supporters have been keenly interested in the figure ever since the Roman Catholic sex abuse crisis hit five years ago. The church has revealed that there have been 13,000 credible accusations against Catholic clerics since 1950.

Protestant numbers have been harder to come by and are sketchier because the denominations are less centralized than the Catholic church; indeed, many congregations are independent, which makes reporting even more difficult.

Some of the only numbers come from three insurance companies — Church Mutual Insurance Co., GuideOne Insurance Co. and Brotherhood Mutual Insurance Co.

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Vanity Fair Celebrates Spotlight and The Boston Globe’s Real-Life Reporters

UNITED STATES
Vanrity Fair

BY JULIE MILLER

With all of the champagne and red-carpet ephemera spilling and swirling through Oscar season, it’s easy to forget the importance of film. But on Wednesday night, Vanity Fair reminded Hollywood of the medium’s potential with an intimate dinner honoring Spotlight, the powerful drama from Tom McCarthy that chronicles the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize–winning investigation of the Catholic Church’s sex-abuse cover-up. The real-life reporters who attended the event, co-hosted by Barneys New York at the Chateau Marmont, cut through the Hollywood pomp to speak about meaningful matters highlighted in the best-picture candidate.

“It says such wonderful things about the importance of investigative journalism, which we very much believe in and which is in serious decline,” said Michael Rezendes, the reporter who is portrayed in the drama by Mark Ruffalo. “And also what it says about clergy sex abuse, an issue that we feel very strongly about, is so important.”

Rezendes joined cast members including Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber, and Brian d’Arcy James at the event, and will be attending the Oscars come Sunday. But even at splashy, celebrity-attended affairs, Rezendes said that he always has the investigation and “the survivors in mind. But the attention the film is getting is all very validating. It’s wonderful.”

Because of Spotlight’s significant subject matter, Rezendes believes that the drama deserves the big best-picture prize come Sunday. “This is a movie about something that really, really matters. But it’s not a pill either. I think it’s incredibly entertaining and suspenseful and authentic.”

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MI–Predator priest dies; Victims blast archbishop

MICHIGAN
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Feb. 25, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A predator priest, Fr. Louis Grandpre, has passed away. As best we can tell, Detroit Archbishop Allen Vignernon kept this quiet, denying abuse victims months of comfort. Vignernon seems incapable of handling any part of the church’s on-going abuse and cover up crisis with honesty and compassion. Shame on him for not letting parents, parishioners and the public know about this predator’s passing.

[Death Notifices]

In 2013, when Fr. Grandpre was finally exposed as a child molester, Vignernon was deceptive. He implied that this was the first allegation of wrongdoing against the priest. It wasn’t.

A private archdiocesan memo showed that Fr. Grandpre was also credibly accused of sexual harassment 15 years ago. How do we know the allegation was “credible?” Because a mediator suggested the victim be paid $160,000. And remember, that was almost 20 years ago.

[BishopAccountability.org]

It would have taken Vigneron minutes to approve and have his public relations team send out a news release about Fr. Grandpre’s death. That would have brought relief to those who worried, until now, that Fr. Grandpre might still be hurting children. That also would have shown that Vigneron takes seriously his repeated pledges to be “open” about predator priests.

Fr. Grandpre retired as pastor of St. Paul of Tarsus Parish in Clinton Township in 2003 but stayed in the parish. A decade later, in 2013, archdiocesan officials disclosed that he’d been credibly accused of molesting a child. We suspect he molested several kids.

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U.S. bishops: Healing wounds is our mission

UNITED STATES
USA Today

Edward J. Burns February 25, 2016

It is important to state that the work of fostering a safe environment for children is a top priority and sacred responsibility of the Catholic Church.

In 2002, Pope John Paul II addressed sexual abuse in the Church and called it “a crime.” In light of this abuse, he said that “the Church herself is viewed with distrust.”

In a 2010 pastoral letter, Pope Benedict XVI said to bishops, “It cannot be denied that some of you and your predecessors failed, at times grievously, to apply the long-established norms of canon law to the crime of child abuse.”

This past September, Pope Francis, immediately after meeting with victims of sexual abuse, spoke to the bishops taking part in the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia. He said, “I commit myself to ensuring that the Church makes every effort to protect minors, and I promise that those responsible will be held to account. Survivors of abuse have become true heralds of hope and ministers of mercy; humbly we owe our gratitude to each of them and to their families for their great courage in shedding the light of Christ on the evil sexual abuse of minors.”

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Editorial: Why we’re cheering for Spotlight to take home an Oscar

UNITED STATES
The Dallas Morning News

Pardon us for rooting for Spotlight, a movie about watchdog journalism, to take home the golden statuette for best movie at Sunday’s Oscars.

The critical acclaim for Spotlight has elevated great public service journalism from the anonymous drudgery of tedious record searches, endless interviews and sleepless nights to global prominence. And, we hope, it offers the public a small window into what inspires so many journalists to come to work each day.

The movie depicts how the Boston Globe took on the insular and powerful Roman Catholic Church in Boston to investigate allegations against defrocked priest John Geoghan, accused of molesting more than 80 boys. The Globe showed intense reporting courage and newsroom leadership to prove that the church was covering up sexual abuse.

The real investigation created angst in the Boston Globe newsroom as editors, executives and reporters worked to uncover a horrific story about Boston’s most powerful institution. Most people never bear witness to this internal challenge of journalism; Spotlight portrayed it so accurately.

Most of all, the film revealed the importance of vigorous reporting and how great watchdog work protects our democracy and those who live in it. And it shows that society-changing stories don’t just fall into a reporter’s lap.

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Spotlight’s unfinished business: Our view

UNITED STATES
USA Today

The Editorial Board

February 25, 2016

Catholic Church drags its feet on accountability for sexual abuse scandal.

You can’t expect a movie, even one as riveting as Spotlight, to change the culture of a centuries-old institution like the Catholic Church. But perhaps the film, up for six Academy Awards on Sunday, can remind the church of its unfinished business in confronting a decades-long coverup of rampant child molestation.

The movie depicts an investigation by the Spotlight reporting team at The Boston Globe, which broke the news in January 2002 and brought international attention to a sickening scandal in Boston that has since engulfed the church around the world. In the United States alone, more than 17,000 victims have reported sexual abuse, going back as far as 1950, involving about 6,400 priests in 100 cities.

Yet, not once in the past 14 years has a single U.S. bishop, let alone a cardinal, been removed from ministry for a role in the scandal. Perhaps the church could not have prevented child molesters from entering the priesthood, but bishops and cardinals could have stopped the crimes of serial predators. Many children would have been spared had religious leaders done what you’d expect any decent person to do: Report alleged crimes to authorities and, at the very least, keep molesters away from children. Often, they did neither.

Reports of abuse were ignored. Predator priests were sent for “treatment,” then shuffled off to other parishes, often to molest again. When lawsuits threatened to blow the church’s cover, the cases were settled secretly.

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Belgische misbruikslachtoffers verliezen zaak van kerk

BELGIE
KRO-NCRV

[A court in Ghent today said Belgian bishops and other church officials can not be held jointly and liable for the damage to victims of sexual abuse. Forty victims had gone to court to recover damages jointly by church officials for negligence.]

Gent (BELGA/ANP) 25 februari 2016 – Belgische bisschoppen en andere kerkelijke hoogwaardigheidsbekleders kunnen niet hoofdelijk aansprakelijk worden gesteld voor de schade van slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik. Een veertigtal slachtoffers was naar de rechter gestapt om gezamenlijk schade te verhalen bij kerkelijke bestuurders wegens nalatigheid.

Het hof van beroep in Gent verklaarde de dagvaarding vandaag in navolging van het vonnis van de rechtbank in 2013 nietig. “Nergens wordt vermeld wie, waar of wanneer misbruikt werd”, aldus het hof. De beschuldiging is niet concreet en specifiek genoeg en de geestelijken weten dan niet waartegen ze zich moeten verweren, aldus het hof.

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Oculta Iglesia cifra de pederastas

MEXICO
El Popular

[The former priest Alberto Athie Gallo said the number of pedophile priests are still hidden.]

El activista y defensor de las víctimas de abuso sexual cometidos por sacerdotes católicos, Alberto Athié Gallo, aseguró que no se sabe el paradero del sacerdote Nicolás Aguilar, quien se ordenó en la década de 1970 en la diócesis de Tehuacán, región donde trabajó y tras ser señalado por abusos fue cambiado pero después regresó.

También dijo que el número de abusos sexuales cometidos por sacerdotes en territorio poblano es todavía un secreto que se resguarda en el poder que mantiene la Iglesia católica en Puebla, aunado a la colusión que existe con las autoridades civiles.

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Los forenses acreditan los abusos de un preceptor en un colegio del Opus Dei de Vizcaya

ESPANA
El Mundo

[Psychologists say a boy who said he was abused by a teacher at an Opus Dei school was telling the truth.]

25/02/2016

Cuando el chico contó que a los 12 años su profesor le llevaba al despacho y bajaba las persianas, cuando explicó que le tocaba los muslos y le pedía que se masturbara, cuando relató que le hacía desnudarse y le manoseaba por todo el cuerpo, cuando recordó que le forzaba a sentarse en sus rodillas y todo lo demás, decimos, el chico no estaba con una fabulación de adolescente.

El chico estaba contando la verdad de un hombre.Eso es lo que sostienen las dos psicólogas y las dos médicos forenses que han explorado al alumno de 19 años.El informe definitivo encargado por el Juzgado de Primera Instancia e Instrucción número 5 de Getxo (Vizcaya) sostiene ahora que el chaval no miente.

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Retired vicar denies raping schoolgirl

UNITED KINGDOM
Salisbury Journal

A RETIRED vicar has denied raping a schoolgirl more than 40 years ago.

Fredrick Williams, 74, of Central Street, Ludgershall, pleaded not guilty to nine sexual abuse charges at Salisbury Crown Court on Friday, all relating to the same girl.

He stands accused of raping the girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, twice between September 1971 and June 1974.

The remaining seven charges relate to other sexual acts allegedly carried out between January 1971 and June 1974.

In the dock at Salisbury Crown Court, Mr Williams requested a hearing-loop to help him follow proceedings.

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Jehovah’s Witnesses’ sex abuse scandal is a lot like Catholic Church’s

UNITED STATES
Reveal: The Center for Investigative Reporting

By Heidi Hirvonen / February 25, 2016

The release of “Spotlight” – the Oscar-nominated film chronicling The Boston Globe’s groundbreaking investigation into child sexual abuse among Catholic priests – has refocused attention on problems in the church and trumpeted the importance of investigative reporting.

This week’s episode of Reveal goes behind the scenes with the real Globe reporters to learn more about how the story broke in 2002 – and what happened after the credits rolled.

CULTURE OF SECRECY LEAVES DOOR OPEN FOR SEX ABUSE

Right now, we’re learning a lot about another religion with a history of hiding child sexual abuse. The themes in our new episode parallel Reveal reporter Trey Bundy’s ongoing investigation into abuse among Jehovah’s Witnesses. Taken together, the two religions share a series of troubling themes and tactics.

Abuse allegations stifled from the top

The Globe’s reporting didn’t just reveal crimes; it shed light on a series of cover-ups by high-ranking Catholic Church officials. In one dramatic example, a priest who had been accused of molestation and rape more than 130 times was not disciplined. Rather, he was reassigned by then-Cardinal Bernard Law to a new parish, with disastrous consequences.

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George Pell: Church abuse victims travel to Rome to witness Cardinal’s royal commission appearance

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Rachael Brown

A group of church abuse survivors will take off from Melbourne today for Rome, to be in the same room as Cardinal George Pell as he fronts the child abuse royal commission.

They had hoped the Cardinal would visit the Victorian city of Ballarat, a site of clerical abuse in the 1960s and ’70s, but a heart condition has prevented him leaving the Vatican.

For some, travelling 16,000 kilometres to watch what will be broadcast to Australia via video-link is about taking some power back.

Others feel it will be harder for the Cardinal to fudge facts if victims are staring him in the eye when he faces the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

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Score For Chasidic Sex Abuse Whistleblower In Forward Suit

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

02/25/16

Amy Sara Clark
Deputy Managing Editor

Sam Kellner’s defamation suit against The Jewish Daily Forward lives to fight another day.

Manhattan Supreme Court Judge Debra A. James denied the newspaper’s motion to dismiss in a decision issued today, ruling that Kellner is a private person, not a public figure as The Forward had argued. The distinction is key because that means Kellner only needs to show that The Forward acted negligently rather than with actual malice.

The subject of the suit, brought by Kellner in November 2014, is an article written by Paul Berger, “Sam Kellner’s Tangled Hasidic Tale of Child Sex Abuse, Extortion and Faith,” and a tweet, mistakenly referring to Kellner as a convicted extortionist. According to Kellner’s complaint, the tweet went uncorrected by the paper for six days after they were alerted to the error.

The Forward sought to have the case dismissed on the grounds that the article was opinion, and thus protected speech. It also argued that the mistaken language of the tweet was inadvertent and not intended to defame Kellner.

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Community pressure may have stymied NYPD investigation into haredi assailant

NEW YORK
Jerusalem Post

The suspect, an unnamed twenty-year-old haredi man who is said to come from a prominent family, turned himself in earlier this week after the NYPD released security camera footage of him.

A police investigation into an ultra-orthodox man believed to have attempted to abduct a Brooklyn teenager was closed this week after the victim stopped cooperating with police due to communal pressure, the Daily News reported on Wednesday.

The suspect, an unnamed twenty-year-old haredi man who is said to come from a prominent family, turned himself in earlier this week after the NYPD released security camera footage of him. The suspect accosted the fourteen year old girl in the Midwood neighborhood of Brooklyn last Tuesday, attempting to physically restrain her and demanding that she come with him until confronted by a third party.

Despite the suspect turning himself in, however, police sources who spoke with the New York newspaper asserted that no further probe into the matter is in the works as the family of the victim “stopped cooperating with the cops.”

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Abuse victims’ final words as they head to Rome to face Cardinal Pell

AUSTRALIA
Starts at Sixty

As they readied to board a plane to Rome to face Cardinal George Pell, church abuse survivors shared their thoughts, fears and hopes about the long trip to Italy.

A group of ten victims will leave today, accompanied by a small support team of counsellors and doctors who will help them through to difficult proceedings.

The group hope that by forcing Pell to face them in person as he gives his testimony, he will be compelled to give honest and factual responses to the Inquiry’s questions.

One of the survivors making the trip is David Ridsdale, who told the royal commission he phoned Pell in 1993 to tell him that his uncle Gerald Ridsdale was abusing him.

Instead of helping him and reporting Gerald to the police, Pell tried to silence David.

“What we’re hoping for is the same we’ve given, which is just truth,” David told the ABC.

“I guess it will with a part of the story, because it was the phone call I made to Cardinal Pell which set my trajectory on this very public path I’ve found myself, which was never my intention and something that was very difficult for me to have come to grips with.

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Pell draws world spotlight to Vatican

AUSTRALIA
SBS

AAP

There is huge international interest in what Cardinal George Pell has to say about the sexual abuse of children by clergy in the Ballarat region of Victoria when he gives evidence from a conference room at the elegant Hotel Quirinale in Rome.

By virtue of his position – head of the Secretariat of the Economy – Dr Pell is the third most powerful member of the Catholic Church bureaucracy.

This, combined with his request to give evidence by video-link, by itself would have been enough to swing the spotlight towards the Vatican.

However, international media interest has been further boosted by news an Australian crowd funding effort raised the money for abuse survivors to go to Rome to be in the room when the cardinal appears on Monday.

Hope are high the painstaking approach to questioning taken by the child sexual abuse royal commission will get beyond rhetoric and shed light on how the Vatican hierarchy handles abuse by Catholic clergy.

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The cardinal and the royal commission: the questions George Pell must answer

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

David Marr
Thursday 25 February 2016

Cardinal George Pell is bold. Priests have told the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse over and over again that they knew something was going on back then and now regret doing little more than passing the awful news up the line.

They left it to others.

That’s not Pell’s position. He says he knew nothing – nothing while he was a priest in Ballarat about the paedophiles around him, and little about these men and their victims in his years as an auxiliary bishop in Melbourne.

He was never in the loop. No one warned him. No one complained to him. He didn’t read that letter or this report. It never came up at meetings. There’s nothing in the minutes. There’s nothing in the files.

According to the cardinal, he rose through the ranks in a state of nearly perfect ignorance while – as he now acknowledges with remorse – systematic cover-ups allowed paedophile priests to prey on innocent children.

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Christian Brothers hired private investigator to ‘dig dirt’ on abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 25, 2016

Chris Johnston

The Christian Brothers hired a private investigator in 1995 to “dig up dirt” on victims of a notorious paedophile priest in Ballarat.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse was told today the private investigator, Glynis McNeight, of Ballarat, visited two victims of Brother Ted Dowlan at home just before Dowlan was charged by police for historical sex crimes against boys.
Ted Dowlan.

The object of the exercise, the commission heard, was for the Christian Brothers’ legal team – from a small firm in Ocean Grove – to find out what kind of witnesses the victims would be in court and whether, according to counsel assisting the commission Stephen Free, they would be “easily torn apart in the witness box”.

One victim Ms McNeight visited ended up crying and agitated and she reported to the law firm – which was being paid by the Christian Brothers – that the victim was “nervous” and “excitable” and was prone to tears and bad language. He would have “no credibility” as a witness, she wrote.

The investigator, who called herself an “inquiry agent”, asked Victoria Police for details of the victims but police refused. A policeman involved in the investigation warned her that she could pervert the course of justice.

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Oscar Math: ‘The Revenant’ Should Beat Out ‘Spotlight’ For Best Picture

CALIFORNIA
Hollywood Reporter

2/24/2016 by Ben Zauzmer

The winners that a mathematical model predicts in the top eight categories favor Leonardo DiCaprio and Brie Larson, but Sylvester Stallone may have to sweat it out.

The Revenant is twice as likely as Spotlight to take the big prize of best picture at Sunday night’s 88th annual Oscars. Leonardo DiCaprio and Brie Larson are, statistically speaking, assured the top acting awards. But while many are predicting a Sylvester Stallone victory in the best supporting actor category, that race is still looking like a close call.

That, at least, is how my mathematical predictions are looking for the big night.

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With ‘Spotlight’ movie an award contender, Catholic reform movement assesses scandal

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Donna B. Doucette | Feb. 25, 2016

The critically acclaimed movie “Spotlight” could receive a Best Picture Oscar this Sunday. The film about how The Boston Globe investigated and brought to light clergy sexual abuse of children and its cover up in the Boston archdiocese has brought renewed awareness to the scandal worldwide.

But many Catholics have had a heightened sense of the crisis all along. Some of those Catholics — determined to remain faithful while addressing the scandal — formed Voice of the Faithful only a couple of months after the Globe’s sensational January 2002 story appeared.

VOTF continues its work nearly a decade and half later because the scandal remains — “a mass psychological dysfunction hidden in plain sight, which has stretched back decades or even centuries and will, unchecked, do precisely the same in the future,” according to Peter Bradshaw’s “Spotlight” review in The Guardian.

Amid the passionate indignation the scandal created, VOTF grew rapidly to comprise an international membership. Key to members is to remain faithful Catholics and to help redress and prevent scandal by changing the way the Church operates.

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