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 21, 2016

Abuse victims’ request to hear Cardinal Pell’s evidence in Rome a ‘reasonable’ request, Royal Commission says

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

It is a reasonable request for clergy abuse survivors to be in the room in Rome when Cardinal George Pell gives evidence via a video link, an inquiry chair has ruled.

Child abuse royal commission chair Justice Peter McClellan on Monday said technical testing was still being carried out at a hotel in central Rome for Cardinal Pell’s evidence to the hearing in Sydney next week.

A crowd funding campaign has raised more than $200,000 to send a group of clergy abuse survivors and support personnel to Rome to hear Cardinal Pell’s testimony over three days from next Monday.

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.

Commission says abuse victims will get to hear Cardinal George Pell give evidence from Roman hotel room

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 22, 2016

Chris Johnston
Senior Writer for The Age

Clerical abuse survivors from Ballarat will be able to listen to Cardinal George Pell’s evidence before a Royal Commission from a hotel room in Rome next week.

A Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing in Ballarat was told this morning the request to fly to Rome – paid for by a successful crowd-funding campaign – to hear Cardinal Pell from Rome rather than Sydney was, according to Justice Peter Maclellan, “reasonable.”

Cardinal Pell’s evidence will be heard while the Commission sits in Sydney next Monday.

However Justice Maclellan said the Australian embassy in Rome had secured a hotel room with the appropriate technical facilities to get a signal of his evidence to Sydney and accommodate the survivors who want to be in Rome to hear it.

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 evidence: royal commission says victims can be present in Rome

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Sunday 21 February 2016

Arrangements are being made for child sexual abuse survivors to witness Cardinal George Pell give evidence in person in Rome after the chair of the commission found their request “not unreasonable”.

The third round of hearings into abuse that occurred within the Diocese of Ballarat began on Monday morning. Justice Peter McClellan opened by addressing the campaign by survivors and their supporters to go to Rome to see Pell’s evidence on 29 February.

“The royal commission has received requests from some survivors that they be able to be present in the room where Cardinal Pell give evidence in Rome next week,” McClellan said before the delivering of the opening address.

“The commission considers that to be a reasonable request. With the assistance of the Australian embassy in Rome we have located a room in a hotel in Central Rome which I am advised has the technical facilities to ensure an effective signal to Australia.”

Testing of that room would occur Monday, McClellan said. He would make an announcement on Tuesday as to the suitability of the room.

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.

Leifer fails to show

ISRAEL
J-Wire

February 22, 2016 by J-Wire Staff

At a hearing in the Jerusalem District Court Sunday the Judge issued a ruling that Malka Leifer, former principal of the Adass Yisroel Girls School in Melbourne, accused of sexual abuse, be re-evaluated by a State psychiatrist.

Her fight to avoid extradition to Australia to stand trial has dragged on for 18 months. She has so far successfully evaded being sent back because of alleged panic attacks every time a court hearing has been set. This time, her defence lawyer unsuccessfully argued to have the case dismissed because of his client’s medical condition. However on this occasion the judge rejected the plea and ordered another evaluation by a state psychiatrist which will be presented to the court on 20 March at which time he will decide on if and how the case should proceed.

The State prosecutor maintained that Malka Leifer’s panic attacks were designed to permanently postpone her return to Australia and that the question of whether she was fit to stand trial was a matter for the Australian courts to decide.

The former principal at Melbourne’s Adass Israel girls’ school fled Australia in 2008 ahead of formal complaints.

Although this case has been virtually ignored by the Israeli media in the past, it now seems that local support groups of sexual abuse s are rallying behind the victims and demanding that the matter be speedily resolved.

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.

An unholy mess

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank Brennan | 22 February 2016

Cardinal George Pell still has a lot of questions to answer before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. On medical advice he has decided not to risk the long plane flight home from Rome. This makes things much harder for victims seeking closure.

It makes things harder for others, including members of the Catholic Church and citizens wanting certainty about the appalling offences of the past and clarity about the failures of church leaders adequately to protect children from repeated abuse by pedophiles.

Given the response to Tim Minchin’s song, it also makes things harder for Pell. But that’s his decision. The rest of us have to live with his decision, and do the best we can to ensure the that royal commission can do its job well, primarily for the good of the victims and to ensure the future protection of children in institutions.

Victims travelling to Rome have asked that Pell meet with them. He has said he will. They have also asked to be present in the room while he gives his evidence. That request is not one Pell can grant; it needs to be considered by the royal commission.

This request could be granted only if it were possible to provide a suitable court room in Rome where Pell could give his evidence in the presence of the public. Such a room would need to be open to the public, and not just to victims.

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.

Case Study 28, February 2016, Ballarat – Live hearing

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

[live steam]

Stage 3: February 2016

The Royal Commission will hold the third part of the public hearing regarding the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat commencing on 22 February 2016 at the Ballarat Magistrates Court.

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

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

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.

Israeli judge rejects former Melbourne Jewish school principal’s plea to drop extradition over sex abuse claims

ISRAEL/AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Middle East correspondent Sophie McNeill
Updated February 22, 2016

An Israeli judge has rejected a plea to drop the extradition case of a former principal accused of molesting students at an ultra-Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne.

At a hearing on Sunday at the Jerusalem District Court, attorney Yehuda Fried told Judge Amnon Cohen that former Adass Israel School principal Malka Leifer went into “panic attacks” whenever her court date approached.

“The attempts to extradite her to Australia has put her in a panicked state. Since then she has started to get waves of panic causing depression,” Mr Fried told the court.

“Why are we doing this to her?”

It was the seventh court hearing to determine whether Ms Leifer was mentally well enough to be extradited to Australia.

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.

Bischof beurlaubt Priester aus Horstmar

DEUTSCHLAND
Westfalische Nachrichten

[Stellungnahme von Pfarrdechant Johannes Büll]

[Priest originally from Nigeria has been on leave from Horstmar after allegations of child sexual abuse were made.]

Horstmar/Münster –
Weil er ein Kind sexuell missbraucht haben soll, hat der Bischof von Münster, Dr. Felix Genn, einen Geistlichen beurlaubt, der seit 2012 in der Kirchengemeinde St. Gertrudis in Horstmar tätig war. Der 48-Jährige hat auf Weisung des Bischofs die Gemeinde inzwischen verlassen und hält sich derzeit in einem Kloster auf.

Von Axel Roll

In Horstmar steht ein Priester in Verdacht, ein Kind sexuell missbraucht zu haben. Der Bischof von Münster, Dr. Felix Genn, hat den Seelsorger beurlaubt. Der Geistliche war zuletzt in der Kirchengemeinde St. Gertrudis im Einsatz.

„Gegen den aus Nigeria stammenden Geistlichen werden Vorwürfe erhoben, im vergangenen Jahr sexuell intendierte Handlungen an einem Kind vorgenommen zu haben“, heißt es wörtlich in der Pressemitteilung des Bistums zu diesem Vorfall.

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»: Formidabler Thriller um Missbrauch

DEUTSCHLAND
MV

Berlin (dpa) – Mit sechs Nominierungen gehört «Spotlight» mit zu den Favoriten bei den diesjährigen Oscars. Kurz vor der Verleihung kommt das packende Drama rund um sexuellen Missbrauch in der katholischen Kirche von Boston nun auch in die deutschen Kinos.

Inszeniert von US-Regisseur Tom McCarthy («Station Agent») ist der Thriller, der auf wahren Ereignissen basiert, mit Darstellern wie Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber und Michel Keaton stark besetzt.

Im Jahr 2003 erhielt das renommierte, 1872 gegründete Traditions-Blatt «The Boston Globe» den Pulitzer-Preis für eine Reihe von Artikeln, in denen ein Missbrauchsskandal unerhörten Ausmaßes innerhalb der katholischen Kirche Bostons aufgedeckt wurde. Atemlos und sehr stringent erzählt uns Regisseur und Drehbuchautor McCarthy in «Spotlight» nun, wie es zu den Enthüllungen kommen konnte.

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.

Obispos involucrados en casos de abuso sexual, deben renunciar: Papa Francisco

Diario de Morelos

[The pope said bishops must resign if they moving pedophile priests from parish to parish.]

El papa Francisco declaró el jueves que cualquier obispo que transfiera a un cura sospechoso de abuso sexual de una parroquia a otra debe renunciar.

El pontífice habló del tema del abuso de menores por parte de curas en su viaje de regreso desde México, donde las víctimas del padre Marcial Maciel aún están traumatizadas por las violaciones que él cometió.

“Es una monstruosidad”, declaró el papa en referencia al abuso sexual de menores, “porque un sacerdote está consagrado a traer a un niño a Dios. Y si lo que comete es un sacrificio diabólico, lo destruye”.

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 Ballarat Bishop Ronald Mulkearns to give evidence to royal commission into child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The royal commission is expected to hear from the former Bishop of Ballarat as it continues to investigate historic child sex abuse in the western Victorian city.

Ronald Mulkearns was in charge of the Ballarat diocese during one of its darkest periods.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse has already heard that the former bishop received numerous complaints about paedophile priests over three decades.

But those complaints were not referred to police.

The royal commission heard Bishop Mulkearns instead moved the priests around western Victoria where they continued to offend.

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

Cardinal Pell may never return to Australia

AUSTRALIA
3AW

February 22, 2016

Cardinal George Pell says he doesn’t know if he’ll ever return to Australia amid claims he’s being investigated by Victoria Police for alleged sexual abuse.

Speaking publicly for the first time since the bombshell report in the Herald Sun, Cardinal Pell reportedly said he doesn’t know if he’ll ever come back to Australia, where he is reportedly under investigation by Victoria Police for alleged sexual abuse of up to 10 boys across four decades.

Having issued a lengthy statement on Friday strongly denying the allegations, the 74-year-old said he has said enough already and has co-operated.

Senior police are yet to decide whether there is enough evidence to justify seeking an interview.

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.

How Spotlight cast the ‘Voice of God,’ and how the Church has (or hasn’t) changed

UNITED STATES
Entertainment Weekly

BY JEFF LABRECQUE • @JEFFLABRECQUE

Posted February 19 2016

The Spotlight cast boasts one of the deepest acting benches in recent memory. Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams received Oscar nominations for playing two of the Boston Globe reporters who exposed decades of clerical sex abuse in 2002, but the entire ensemble — which includes Billy Crudup, Brian d’Arcy James, Michael Keaton, Liev Schreiber, John Slattery, Stanley Tucci, and many others — has been justly celebrated, winning the group acting prize from the Screen Actors Guild. There’s one player, however, who hasn’t necessarily enjoyed the same attention, even though he’s an Oscar-nominated actor who plays a pivotal role in the film: Richard Jenkins.

If you don’t recall seeing Jenkins, you’re not wrong. He’s never seen, but his performance is loud and clear. Jenkins plays Richard Sipe, the ex-priest whose detailed research about sexual proclivities of Catholic clergy members helped guide the Spotlight reporters when they were still stumbling around in the dark. Some of his accusations are shocking, to the Globe reporters and the movie audience: he estimated that 6 percent of priests act out sexually with children and alleged that Boston’s esteemed Cardinal Bernard Law buried a study that raised similar questions and concerns years before. “Richard understood the culture of secrecy that was generated by the celibacy requirement that resulted in the clergy being a wonderful place for pedophiles and other abusers to hide and prey on children,” says Globe reporter Mike Rezendes, who’s portrayed by Ruffalo in the film. “He became kind of our guru for the entire project for the rest of a year and a half.”

In fact, Sipe had met face-to-face with the Globe reporters at least once, but most of their communication was via phone, which writer/director Tom McCarthy and co-writer Josh Singer quickly latched on to for dramatic effect. “Tom and I referred to him almost as the Voice of God,” says Singer. “There was something really interesting about hearing these facts over the phone. That way, you get them unvarnished: there’s no person or personality attached. You can really focus on the facts. I think it makes the audience lean-in and listen.”

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.

Deaf victims of Catholic abuse in Quebec get a huge pay-out

CANADA
The Freethinker

A judge has ordered a Catholic religious order, the Clercs de St Viateur du Canada, and the church-run Montreal Insitute for the Deaf to pay $30 million to a group of former students who were sexually assaulted by priests.

According to this report, the settlement for sexual assault is the largest in Quebec history.

At least 60 deaf students were assaulted by members of the religious community and lay people working at the school between 1940 and 1982. The school changed its name to the Institut Raymond-Dewar in 1984.

The judgment brings to an end a long and painful process that began with the authorisation of a class action suit in 2012.

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 speaks out for the first time since allegations he sexually abused minors – and says his health is ‘holding up’ and he would ‘of course cooperate’ with a police investigation

ROME
Daily Mail

By ISABEL HUNTER IN ROME FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

Cardinal George Pell was in good spirits today as he repeated his insistence that he would ‘of course cooperate’ with Victoria Police’s investigation into allegations that he sexually abused between five and ten boys.

The Cardinal and top aide to Pope Francis has rejected the allegations as ‘utterly false’ and said that he has still not been contacted by police on the matter.

He is the subject of a year-long investigation by Victoria Police for the alleged sexual abuse of up to ten minors from 1978 to 2001.

Regarding his health, which has prevented him from flying to Australia to give evidence to the Royal Commission on allegations that he covered up the abuse of minors while he was a priest in Ballarat, he said he was ‘holding up’.

‘I can’t travel on my doctor’s advice,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

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.

Israeli judge orders tests in Melbourne case

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

February 22, 2016

Jamie Walker – Middle East Correspondent

Israel’s prosecution service has persuaded a judge to order fresh psychiatric evaluations of a former Melbourne Jewish school principal who is fighting extradition to Australia to answer child sex abuse charges.

Judge Amnon Cohen, of the Jerusalem District Court, will use the expert advice to decide whether the proceedings should continue against Malka Leifer, who faces 74 charges in Australia of indecently dealing with girls at the Adass Israel School.

In ruling she should be seen again by a state psychiatrist, Judge Cohen rejected a defence application that the extradition proceedings be suspended because Mrs Leifer suffers panic attacks ahead of each hearing, preventing her attendance.

State prosecutor Avital Ribner-Oron told Judge Cohen on Sunday local time that Mrs Leifer was dragging out proceedings to avoid being sent to Australia to face prosecution, and the accused pedophile had “no interest” in becoming well.

But Mrs Leifer’s lawyer Freid Yuhuda, insisted she was in such mental distress that continuation of the case would cause her permanent harm.

For more than 18 months, the mother-of-eight has been in hospital ahead of each court date, forcing repeated adjournments.

She was absent again for Sunday’s hearing, staying this time in her Bnei Brak home in central Israel.

The impasse is set to finally be broken after Judge Cohen ordered that Mrs Leifer be seen again by the district psychiatrist, one of the state doctors who have evaluated her previously and found she was not faking her symptoms.

Judge Cohen will bring the case back on March 20 when he could make a decisive finding on whether it should continue, and if so, how.

For the first time Mr Yuhuda argued there should be no further hearings due to the anguish it causes Mrs Leifer from stress-induced psychosis.

Mr Yuhuda said she did not suffer from psychotic episodes “24/7”, but only when an impending court date triggered a panic attack.

“This is not a fraud, this is not an act and the doctors at the end of the line think it is a psychotic attack,” he said.

But Ms Ribner-Oron, arguing for extradition, said the “elephant in the room” was that Mrs Leifer had no interest in getting well, as this meant she would have to go to Australia to face her accusers.

The argument about whether the former principal was fit to stand trial there was not one that the Israeli court had to consider; “this discussion is for Australia”, the state prosecutor said.

Leifer went to Israel in 2008 within hours of being stood down by the Adass school board over the allegations, and has been under house arrest since being arrested by Israeli authorities in 2014 in response to the extradition request by the Australian government. She had been recruited from Israel to run the girls’ school in 2000.

But the case has been unable to proceed because Mrs Leifer’s lawyers say her stress-induced psychotic episodes are too severe to allow her to respond to summonses to appear in court or to properly communicate with them if she did, as required by Israeli law.

After being virtually ignored by the Israeli media, the case is gradually gaining traction, with Israeli sex abuse victim support groups rallying behind the former Adass students and their families who are demanding that Mrs Leifer be extradited from Israel, where she is under house arrest.

Outside the court, Manny Waks, a survivor of alleged sex abuse at Jewish orthodox school in Melbourne, said he was disappointed for Mrs Leifer’s alleged victims that the case was up in the air.

But he said he was encouraged that the judge had accepted the prosecution for Mrs Leifer to undergo psychiatric re-evaluation. “But with this great news the tension builds as the final decision is in the hands of the psychiatrist’s report, Mr Waks told The Australian.

Last September, a Melbourne judge awarded one of Mrs Leifer’s alleged victims $1.27 million in civil damages for sexual abuse.

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Christian Brothers focus of abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

A clergy abuse victim hopes the royal commission exposes the extent of “hideous” child sex abuse by Christian Brothers.

The child abuse royal commission returns to Ballarat on Monday to focus on allegations involving the Christian Brothers and hear from a key Catholic bishop who knew about pedophile priests.

Four members of the Catholic order abused children at a Ballarat school but this week’s hearing will extend beyond that diocese to cover the wider St Patrick’s Province of the Christian Brothers.

Stephen Woods, who was abused by two Christian Brothers and Australia’s worst pedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale, wants the commission to expose the cover-up.

“I know that there’s going to be a lot of hideous stuff come out,” Mr Woods said.

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Anti-Pell hysteria only undermines abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Editorial

FEBRUARY 22, 2016

George Pell has already appeared twice before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse — once in person and once via video link from Rome — and always made it clear he was prepared to do so again.

It would be better for all concerned, especially the cardinal, if he did not have a serious heart condition that precludes long-distance flying at present. If that were the case, he could give evidence in person about Ballarat, where he served as a young priest but had no authority in the diocese, and the Archdiocese of Melbourne, where he established the Melbourne Response shortly after his appointment as archbishop in 1996. It was one of the first formal processes of any church in the world for dealing with child sexual abuse. Victim groups regarded it at the time as “the best of a bad lot’’.

In giving evidence electronically, Cardinal Pell will still be subjected to the same rigorous cross-examination he would have faced here. He deserves to be heard respectfully, like all witnesses. That is not good enough for his antagonists, however, who have whipped up a dangerous lynch-mob mentality rarely seen in Australia even against prominent child murderers. It needs to be contained and the tensions surrounding it examined in a clear light.

Last week, singer Tim Minchin hurled verbal abuse at the cardinal, branding him “scum’’, a “buffoon’’ and a “coward’’ on Network Ten’s The Project, with ABC’s 7.30 rerunning the foul-mouthed ditty. As The Australian noted in Cut & Paste, Minchin is hostile to the church, with the The Pope Song also a litany of hate speech: “F..k the motherf..ker,” it runs. “F..k the motherf..king Pope.”

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Too effective in Rome for his enemies’ liking

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

TESS LIVINGSTONE
THE AUSTRALIAN
FEBRUARY 22, 2016

Plenty of people want George Pell to come unstuck. Chief among them are the Vatican old guard, the mafia and heavies whose money laundering, tax evasion and possibly worse will come to an abrupt halt if crucial reforms instigated by the cardinal, such as the professional auditing of all Vatican agencies, including the Vatican Bank, come into force in coming months.

It’s needed. The cardinal, 74, and his team have uncovered more than €1 billion ($1.5bn) in Vatican funds unaccounted for, busted a multi-million-euro rort centred on a children’s hospital funded by a Catholic charity and the Italian government and exposed millions in unexplained transactions. Crunch time is coming, and some in prominent Vatican positions want a return to the “old ways’’. As in Australia, where he injected energy into the church in Melbourne and Sydney, he has been too effective in Rome for his enemies’ liking.

Last week, Pell’s supporters and ideological opponents alike recognised the visceral hatred fermenting in the blogosphere, egged on by Tim Minchin’s tasteless warbling, had become a toxic, dangerous witch hunt of a kind rarely if ever seen in this country. Then, on Friday night, came the well-timed “bombshell’’. It’s not known who made the complaints reportedly being investigated by Victoria Police or who leaked the details. Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton should clarify the matter. Justice must be done and be seen to be done, the presumption of innocence afforded unless otherwise proven.

At least one supposed incident reportedly occurred at the Ballarat pool, where then Father Pell used to swim in summer. Claims that supposedly relate to his time as archbishop at the cathedral in Melbourne are also an utter mystery.

The notion Pell “groomed’’ young males between 1978 and 2001 — and got away with it — beggars belief.

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Principal accused of molesting Melbourne students wants Israel to block extradition

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Andrew Friedman and Shannon Deery
Herald Sun

A SCHOOL principal accused of molesting a string of Melbourne students will ask Israel’s attorney general to block attempts to have her extradited.

Malka Leifer is wanted by Victorian police but has spent more than 18 months fighting attempts to have her return to Melbourne.

She is accused of molesting a number of young female students while principal at ultra-Orthodox Jewish school Adass Israel School in Elsternwick.

She fled to Israel in 2008 after allegations she had been sexually abusing students were made public.

Ms Leifer has been under house arrest since 2014, is required to wear a GPS tracking device and is subject to 24 hour supervision.

She failed to appear at an Israeli court hearing on Sunday, the seventh she has skipped, with her lawyers asking the court to adjourn the case for up to two years because of an alleged psychiatric condition.

The court heard her legal team would also ask the Israeli attorney general to dismiss extradition proceedings.

Victims advocate Manny Waks said he was “galled” by defence calls for justice for their client, who they said was now being tried in the media instead of in court.

“How appalling to hear representatives of Mrs Leifer talk about ‘justice’, when that is all the victims dream about back in Australia,” Mr Waks told the Herald Sun.

“Justice in this case means appearing in court and facing the charges against her. I certainly appreciate that coming to court to charge 74 counts of abuse would be stressful for anybody but there is no shortage of medications to help control her condition.

“To say that we were frustrated in court is mild, to say the least. All I can say is that I was actually glad the victims weren’t here to see this farce. It’s appalling, really.”

Ms Leifer has missed all seven hearings in the extradition request that is before the Jerusalem District Court.

A court-appointed psychiatrist has confirmed that the stress of appearing in court brings on psychiatric episodes that prevent her from attending the hearings.

Victims advocates in Israel and Australia said the ongoing saga has made a “joke” of the Israeli justice system.

“As a society, this set a dangerous precedent. As a society, we must focus on protecting children, not the perpetrators of abuse. We will not sit back and watch this farce,” said Miriam Friedman, a member of the Israeli group Magen and a resident of the Orthodox town of Beit Shemesh.

Sources close to the case claim Ms Leifer routinely breaks conditions of her house arrest.

Last year one of her alleged victims was awarded more than $1 million by the Supreme Court of Victoria after launching a lawsuit against her former principal.

Ms Leifer chose not to defend the legal action.

Shannon.deery@news.com.au

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St. Louis archbishop urges Catholic priests to sever ties with Girl Scouts

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Trib Live

Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson is urging priests to sever ties with the Girl Scouts, saying the organization promotes values “incompatible” with Roman Catholic teachings.

The open letter to priests, Scout leaders and other Catholics was posted Thursday on the archdiocese website. It urges parishes that host Girl Scout meetings to consider alternative programs for girls that are more Catholic- or Christian-based.

“We must stop and ask ourselves — is Girl Scouts concerned with the total well-being of our young women? Does it do a good job forming the spiritual, emotional, and personal well-being of Catholic girls?” Carlson wrote.

The letter stops short of demanding an end to Girl Scout meetings at parishes, a common gathering site in the heavily Catholic St. Louis region.

Brian Miller, executive director of the Catholic Youth Apostolate, said Friday that the letter is not meant to pressure priests into pushing out Girl Scouts.

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Cold case arrest gives hope to other families

TEXAS
The Monitor

KRISTIAN HERNANDEZ | STAFF WRITER | Posted: Saturday, February 20, 2016

The recent revival of Irene Garza’s 55-year-old cold case brought new hope to many families across the Rio Grande Valley whose loved ones were killed and the cases were never solved.

John Feit, 83, was arrested Feb. 9 on a murder charge after a Hidalgo County grand jury found enough evidence to prosecute the former Sacred Heart Priest in connection to the 1960 rape and murder of Irene Garza.

Elizabeth Garza, 65, remembers getting the news that day and watching on television as Feit walked into an Arizona jail with the help of a walker.

“I couldn’t believe it,” Garza said. “I said, ‘Pinky’s case is next.’ There is hope that there will be a break in the case of my little brother.”

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.

Eduardo Córdova y los más de 100 casos de pederastia en los que estaría involucrado

MEXICO
Sin Embargo

[Priest Eduardo Cordova and the more than 100 cases of pedophilia in which he is said to be would be involved.]

Por Redacción / Sin Embargo febrero 20, 2016

El Papa calificó, tras su visita a México, la pederastia como “una monstruosidad” y es justo esa práctica, la que en fechas recientes ha puesto en los reflectores a la Iglesia Católica Potosina.¿La razón? Según testimonios que en 2014 hizo públicos Alberto Athié, habría cerca de 100 casos de pederastia en los que estaría involucrado el ahora ex cura Eduardo Córdova Bautista; algunas víctimas habrían informado de la situación a tres arzobispos a lo largo de casi tres décadas… aún ahora esperan justicia.

Ciudad de México, 20 de febrero (SinEmbargo/Pulso).- “Un Obispo que cambia a un sacerdote de parroquia cuando se detecta una pederastia es un inconsciente y lo mejor que puede hacer es presentar la renuncia”, dijo el Papa Francisco este jueves, tras concluir su visita a México.

Francisco dio estas declaraciones a la prensa durante su trayecto en el avión que lo llevó de México a Roma, luego de que fuera cuestionado sobre qué pensaba del tema de la pederastia en México, sobre el padre Marcial Maciel, que si en algún momento ha pensado reunirse con las víctimas, y sobre la idea de que cuando un sacerdote es acusado sólo son cambiados de Parroquia.

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Charity with links to Charles is targeted in paedophilia probe

UNITED KINGDOM
Express

THE GODDARD Inquiry into child sexual abuse is investigating links between the Paedophile Information Exchange and a charity once headed by a trusted adviser to Prince Charles.

By JAMES FIELDING, EXCLUSIVE
Sun, Feb 21, 2016

Investigators have trawled through files relating to PIE and the Albany Trust, a gay advocacy group chaired by Sir Harold Haywood in the 1970s.

PIE was a pro-paedophile activist group, founded in 1974 and disbanded in 1984.

In 1976, records show the Albany Trust worked briefly with PIE to produce an “informative pamphlet” on the “sexuality of children”.

Minutes from a meeting held in Stockwell, south London, in February 1976 show it was attended by Sir Harold, who was also director of the Royal Jubilee and Prince’s Trust, as well as prominent PIE members Keith Hose and Warren Middleton.

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Abuse survivors fear bishop ‘could take secrets to grave’

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 21, 2016

Steve Lillebuen

A former Ballarat bishop’s forthcoming evidence about what the Catholic Church knew about paedophile priests could be a “game changer”, according to a victims’ group.

But others fear Ronald Mulkearns, who has terminal cancer and been given only months to live, may end up taking his secrets to his grave.

The former bishop has been scheduled to give his long-awaited evidence to the child sex abuse royal commission this week when hearings begin again in Ballarat on Monday.

The city will be decorated in ribbons as residents show their public support for abuse survivors.

Bishop Mulkearns presided over the Ballarat parish between 1971 and 1997 – when priests facing child sex abuse allegations, including convicted paedophile priest Gerald Risdale, were moved between parishes. He has told his doctor his memory is vague and the commission has been warned his cognitive impairments mean he may not be able to effectively answer questions.

But victims’ group Broken Rites spokesman Wayne Chamley said Bishop Mulkearns had nothing to lose by being honest about what he knew.

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The Whole Story of Pope Francis’ Interview: Anti-women, Anti-gay, Contempt for Sex Abuse Victims, Support for Putin, Refusal to Face the Argentines and US Politics

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on February 21, 2016 by Betty Clermont

If anyone needs an example of how the corporate media can manipulate and pervert public opinion, they could look no further than how the in-flight interview with Pope Francis has been reported. Indeed, they should study the U.S. media’s misrepresentation of this pontiff since the day he was elected.

Zika virus

Pope: “Abortion is to throw someone out in order to save another. That’s what the Mafia does … You kill one person to save another, in the best case scenario. Or to live comfortably, no? On the other hand, avoiding pregnancy is not an absolute evil. In certain cases, as in this one, or in the one I mentioned of Blessed Paul VI, it was clear. I would also urge doctors to do their utmost to find vaccines against these two mosquitoes that carry this disease. This needs to be worked on.”

While saving a woman’s life is condemned as “what the Mafia does,” the pope reiterated the position of the Catholic Church that birth control is acceptable.

When talking about avoiding pregnancy in connection with the Zika virus, the pope may not necessarily have been implying artificial contraceptive use, but may have been referencing Natural Family Planning, Dr. Melissa Moschella, a philosophy professor at The Catholic University of America, said. …

Moschella also explained that in the Africa case referenced by Pope Francis, the dispensation for the nuns was “not really an exception if you understand the rule.”

The case in question took place in the early 1960s, when the Vatican granted a dispensation to religious sisters living in the Belgian Congo who were in grave danger of rape due to civil unrest to use oral contraceptives.

“In the case of rape, the person who’s raped – from the moral perspective – has not engaged in a sexual act,” Moschella said. Rather, rape is an act of violence and a “violation of the woman’s body without any free choice or acceptance on her part.”

The larger question is whether the pope’s off-the-cuff remarks will be persuasive in Latin American countries where “women are seen mainly as child-bearers and mothers. Such discriminatory stereotypes remain deeply rooted in a conservative and patriarchal culture which still relegates women to the sphere of social reproduction – a culture widely promoted … by conservative forces including the Catholic Church hierarchy,” according to an Amnesty International report.
_____

Same-sex unions

“Pope Francis has not failed to speak out against the law on civil unions , in the midst of this struggle in the Italian Parliament.” In a speech in Mexico, he made his “umpteenth his jab against ‘ideological colonization,’” pope-speak for his opposition to same sex marriage.

While Pope Francis has not spoken directly about the Italian legislation, “Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi has told the Catholic Church to butt out of the debate on providing gay couples with legal recognition and limited adoption rights,” specifically the Italian bishops’ conference.
However, in this on-flight interview Pope Francis did say:

“Every Catholic parliamentarian must vote according their well-formed conscience. … I
remember when matrimony for persons of the same sex was voted on in Buenos Aires and the votes were tied. … And, the other said: ‘I prefer to give it to Kirchner and not Bergoglio.’ This is not a well formed conscience.

On people of the same sex, I repeat what I said on the trip to Rio di Janeiro. It’s in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.”

The Catechism states that homosexual acts are a “grave depravity.” Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger – then head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, later Pope Benedict XVI – added in 1997 that even the homosexual “inclination” is “objectively disordered.”
So, unlike the Church’s position on abortion and contraception, this is something Pope Francis CAN change anytime he wants, but he won’t.
_____

Question to the pope: “The subject of pedophilia … Did you at any moment consider meeting with the victims? And, in general, this idea that when the priests are detected in cases of this nature, what is done is that they are moved to another parish, nothing more?”

The pope didn’t answer the question of why he refused to meet with victims in Mexico. Instead he said: “A bishop who moves a priest to another parish when a case of pedophilia is discovered is a reckless man and the best thing he can do is to present his resignation. Is that clear?”

Again through his words and lack of action, the pope is giving the green light to prelates around the world that they will not be removed from office for aiding and abetting sexual assaults against children. Rather, the pope said he is strengthening procedures against priests: “I decided to name a third secretary adjunct for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to take charge solely of these cases [and forming] an appeals tribunal.”

Pope: “Another thing that is working very well is the commission for the protection of minors.” Yes, because the only member who was an outspoken critic of the pope was booted off earlier this month.

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Muscat ‘immensely disappointed’ by Church committee report on conversion therapy for gay people

MALTA
Times of Malta

Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said today that he was immensely disappointed by comments by the committee which advised the Church on conversion therapy for gay people.

It was unbelievable, he said, that in this day and age, some people thought that sexual orientation was something that could be healed by medication and therapy.

This was an offence to the gay community and all those who wanted to live in a European society which respected the people’s freedom. It was a similar offence to link homosexuality with child abuse.

Dr Muscat said he would defend the right of the Church to speak out, but the government would carry on with its legislation against such conversion therapy.

He could never accept a situation where any Maltese was called a sick or a pedophile because of a particular sexual orientation.

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As a newspaper drama, ‘Spotlight’ is available for home views

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Times

Noel Murray
Spotlight

Universal, $29.98; Blu-ray, $34.98
Available on VOD Tuesday

One of the best newspaper dramas ever made, the multi-Oscar-nominated film is based on the true story of a Boston Globe investigative reporting team that uncovered a pattern of sexual abuse and hush-money payoffs within their local Catholic diocese. Writer-director Tom McCarthy and co-writer Josh Singer look into the decay of venerable institutions, like the church, the government that protected priests “for the good of the community” and a press shedding necessary resources in the Internet age. The film avoids big speeches and instead just watches as a talented cast (including Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams) inhabits the roles of diligent professionals doing some of the most important work of their lives. The “Spotlight” DVD and Blu-ray offers strong follow-up with a trio of featurettes that look at the movie, its source material and the future of journalism.

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Essay of the week: For the love of God, let Catholic clergy love women

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Kevin McKenna / Saturday 20 February 2016

I WAS curiously enchanted by claims in the BBC’s Panorama programme last Monday that Pope John Paul II had enjoyed a close friendship with a female academic. The late pontiff, now in the process of being made a saint by Rome, captured the imagination of the world and the hearts of the Church when he became Pope in 1978. His personal charisma became evident almost as soon as he appeared on the balcony at St Peter’s to greet the world and his flock. That he was also possessed of a chiselled and handsome face and a voice of operatic depth helped make him the our first rock’n’roll pope.

A few years later a friend of mine, captivated by the charms of a fellow student in his English class, was thrilled when she invited him for tea at her flat. Believing that romance and perhaps something else was in the air he rocked up to her west end abode suffused with optimism and Hai Karate only to be startled by the giant-sized poster of John Paul in her kitchen. “How in the name of God are you supposed to compete with that?” he asked me later.

The revelation was a disturbing one: not only was John Paul the successor to Saint Peter and Christ’s vicar on earth, but he was also a poet, footballer, mountaineer, linguist … and the man who brought down the Soviets. If Catholic women are going to judge us all by the standards of this Polish superman then we’ve all got a problem, I thought.

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A personal story of child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 21, 2016

Michael Short
Journalist

A few months ago, I caught up for lunch with lawyer Judy Courtin, one of the staunchest advocates for the victims of the rape and sexual abuse of children and vulnerable others by, in particular, Catholic priests, and one of the people instrumental in the successful campaign to establish the royal commission into the response of churches and other institutions to these crimes. She did her PhD on the issue, was a guest of mine in 2012 in the advocacy column I have written for the past six years, The Zone, and is now representing victims at the commission.
In an eerie coincidence, when I returned from lunch to my desk, there was a joint email from the headmaster and chairman of the board of Ballarat and Queen’s Anglican Grammar School, which I attended for the final five years of my secondary education.

The email read in part: “Ballarat Grammar is seeking to ascertain whether members of its community have experienced abuse at the school. Anyone who has suffered such abuse is encouraged to come forward, with the assurance that disclosures will be treated with confidentiality, and with the utmost sensitivity…This letter has not been prompted by any revelation at the royal commission, but by a desire to assist anyone who might be helped by the affirmation and support of the school.”

It hit me like a physical blow. The image of the priest’s genitals flooded my mind. I could also visualise the hideous, massive flakes of dandruff. I had suppressed the memory for more than 35 years. This is common.

He used to ply us with alcohol in his home. Despite striving, I simply can not fully recall what happened; I might remember more, but at this stage I do not recall being severely sexually abused. However, and this is the most disturbing part, I suddenly recalled that I knew he had done so to at least one boy. I do not remember – and, again, perhaps I will – how I know that, and I am wracked with guilt at not having acted on this knowledge. Sexual abuse is so insidious; victims feel guilt.

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George Pell leaks undermine child sex abuse royal commission: archbishop

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Calla Wahlquist
@callapilla
Sunday 21 February 2016

A senior Australian Catholic church figure has called for an investigation into the “leaks” at Victoria police, following reports that police were investigating allegations of sexual abuse by Cardinal George Pell a week before the 74-year-old was due to appear before the royal commission.

The Melbourne archbishop, Denis Hart, who succeeded Pell in the role in 2001, said the allegations that Pell had committed “multiple offences” both as a priest in Ballarat and in his later role as archbishop of Melbourne “do not reflect the man I have known for more than 50 years”.

“It is very disturbing and concerning to read reports based on leaks to the media that Victoria police has been investigating allegations of abuse against Cardinal George Pell for the past year and that his first knowledge of these allegations has come from those media reports,” Hart said in a statement issued on Saturday.

“The leaked allegations coming at the end of a week in which Cardinal Pell was publicly denigrated and a week before he appears at the royal commission appear designed to do maximum damage to Cardinal Pell and undermine the work of the royal commission. In this environment it is the responsibility of the royal commission to provide a fair and balanced forum for all who appear before it.”

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Leaked claims against Cardinal Pell aim to destroy

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Andrew Bolt
Herald Sun

LAST week I called the witch hunt against Cardinal George Pell vicious and shameful. I thought it could not possibly get worse.

On Saturday, it did.

Now the campaign to destroy Pell has become sinister as well, after it was joined by — in my view — elements of Victoria Police.

VICTORIA POLICE INVESTIGATING CARDINAL PELL

Sources which to me clearly seem to be well-informed police leaked to the Herald Sun unverified and even improbable claims that Pell sexually abused as many as 10 boys between 1978 and 2001.

These sources gave intimate details of the police Sano Taskforce now investigating those claims, including what its members now want from their bosses to go after Pell. Yet Pell himself had not been told of these allegations, which the Sano Taskforce has investigated for a year without senior police approving any charges, or even any questioning of the cardinal.

This leak is clearly timed to hurt Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic.

It seems to me a scandalous injustice and abuse of state power to leak information that the leaker must have known any newspaper would feel compelled to report, if not endorse.

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February 20, 2016

PICTURE EXCLUSIVE – Free to Rome: Cardinal George Pell strolls around the Vatican with a friend after denying child sex abuse claims – but is ‘too ill’ to fly to Australia to answer questions

ROME
Daily Mail

By ISABEL HUNTER IN ROME FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

As police consider travelling to Rome to question Cardinal George Pell over child sex abuse allegations, Australia’s top Catholic has been seen strolling along the streets in the early spring sunshine.

Cardinal Pell, 74, dropped into his local café with a friend on Saturday afternoon, the day after explosive revelations that he is the subject of a year-long investigation by Victoria Police for the alleged sexual abuse of up to ten minors from 1978 to 2001.

Just a stone’s throw from St Peter’s Basilica, the Pope’s special Jubilee Saturday Mass could be heard from Cardinal Pell’s luxurious apartment block.

Thousands of pilgrims flocked to hear Pope Frances’ morning Mass, his first since he returned to Vatican City from Mexico on Thursday.

Set aside for the Pope’s inner circle, Cardinal Pell’s apartment sits on a piazza lined with cafés, souvenir shops and heavy security – Italian police armed with pistols and soldiers with assault rifles patrol the block and intermingle with tourists, padres and nuns alike.

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Cardinal George Pell responds to reports of investigation into sex abuse claims against him

AUSTRALIA/ROME
Herald Sun

February 21, 2016

Patrick Carlyon, Sunday Herald Sun, Melbourne

CARDINAL George Pell was in bed on the other side of the world when the Herald Sun rang his office on Friday afternoon. The newspaper was seeking comment. Victoria police was investigating historical claims that Pell had sexually abused five to 10 boys. The global time difference did not matter. Pell’s denial was swift and unequivocal. They always are.

Pell “strongly denied” the “utterly false” claims. This denial was different to all the others over the past decade. It had to be. The words were measured, as always, and bolstered with adverbs for fullest effect. The outrage bristled. Yet this statement was not about Pell’s knowledge of or response to pedophile priests. Cardinal George Pell had to address new allegations from the past -— his own history — of acts he himself has described as “profoundly evil and completely repugnant”.

The last time this happened, in 2002, Pell received support from the then Prime Minister down.

The details were hazy then, long ago claims by a middle-aged man about a boys’ beach camp at Phillip Island. One man’s word against another man’s.

Back then, public figures didn’t need the findings of an inquiry headed by a retired Supreme Court judge. They didn’t wait to test the evidence. Somehow, word leaked that the accuser had a criminal history. Public figures lined up to attest to Pell’s good name.

This time, for now at least, the untested allegations are even sketchier. Pell said he was unaware of them, had not been questioned, and described their exposure as “outrageous”.

They date to 1978, and a swimming pool, when Pell was a priest in Ballarat East, and the turn of the century, when Pell was the Archbishop of Melbourne, during the same period he fired passions for refusing communion for gay men and women.

Medically-grounded to a religious enclave 16,000km away, Pell seemed isolated yesterday.

There was no immediate clamour of character references from high-fliers. Pell had been accused last week of hiding at the Vatican: now, perhaps, despite the privileges of high office, he seemed stranded in a faraway tower.

Pell nevertheless projected the role so familiar to both his detractors and his defenders: imperious, impatient and infuriated. He sought to turn perceptions of flight into fight, with some success, too: much of yesterday’s media coverage cast Pell as the aggrieved aggressor demanding, in effect, an investigation into the investigation.

“The Cardinal calls on the Premier and the Police Minister to immediately investigate the leaking of these baseless allegations,” his statement read.

HERE was the latest denial in a career of conflict, an end to just another torrid week. In the days before, Pell was the subject of international debate raging about his inability to appear in person at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Everyone had an opinion about Pell’s heart diagnosis. Once, Pell got to pick his fights. Not anymore.

He had been labelled a “coward” in a song that topped iTunes. If he couldn’t come here, crowdfunding initiatives would send abuse victims to him at the Vatican.

He was cast as a wounded lion, an old man (at 74) whose old-world obstinacy would be confounded with modern guile.

“Cardinal Pell has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally,” his office replied.

“As an archbishop for almost 20 years, he has led from the front to put an end to cover- ups, to protect vulnerable people and to try to bring justice to victims.”

Victims, however, have long disagreed. Anthony and Chrissie Foster met Pell to discuss the abuse of their two daughters by Father Kevin O’Donnell. They described Pell’s response to a photo of their daughter Emma. She had cut herself in the photo; later, she committed suicide.

The Fosters have often talked about that meeting, and what they believe was Pell’s “sociopathic lack of empathy”.

Peter Saunders, sacked recently as a member of the papal anti-abuse panel, uses the same language. He said he believed Pell seemed callous and cruel.

The descriptors have become emblematic for critics of the church. Pell has come to embody an institution long accused of placing its preservation ahead of its victims’ needs.

For them, his face has become a symbol of resistance. His public tone is thought to be detached, his words are perceived as blunt. He often projects loftiness instead of warmth.

His careful style of speaking, likened to a barrister talking in abstractions, is considered painful by victims in search of understanding. Once, in likening the church’s culpability to that of a trucking company, he managed to offend not only victims but also truckers.

In 2013, he argued that the church did not grasp the horror of sex abuse in the 1970s, for only then “articles started to appear about the significance and importance and the terrible crimes of paedophilia”.

That evidence, to a Victorian parliament inquiry, followed a script of a corporate head or politician under siege. He offered a statement for his church’s “imperfect” response, then addressed four hours of questions with a patience he may have applied to chess as a child.

He was unmoved when protesters afterwards shrieked that he was doomed to Hell. Perhaps that was most striking: Pell always seems unmoved.

In his shrewd study The Prince, author David Marr makes much of Pell’s professional relationships during his rise in Australia.

Pell was disliked by fellow bishops in Australia for being too conservative. He wasn’t a team player; he bowed only to Rome.

He often reached out to a law firm, Corrs Chambers Westgarth. Peter Mahon, who ran Royce Communications, was a constant presence during times of crisis management.

Pell gained attention before the turn of the century for cataloguing society’s sins. He himself presented an unimpeachable front, and bloomed as a moral talisman for a succession of conservative politicians.

He sought no conventional constituency, and he was unfazed by the inevitable howls he elicited, such as his response in 1999 to teenage suicides linked to homophobia — “If they are connected with homosexuality, it is another reason to be discouraging people going in that direction.”

He railed against same-sex marriage. And contraception. Even the ABC’s Brides of Christ mini-series was an early target. In 2002, before the full horrors of Ballarat were exposed, Pell offered a perspective on abortion. “Abortion is a worse moral scandal than priests sexually abusing young people,” he said.

He built a public name on deriding the sins of those outside of his faith. Yet the sins within his church have come to stamp his career, at least on this side of the world.

His personal account may take in Oxford scholarship, the influences of B.A. Santamaria and the third- highest position at the Vatican — Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, in charge of the Holy See’s finances. The younger man liked swimming and kicking a football; if contemporaries later recalled a stridency of thought, they also remembered a good rapport with young people.

HIS public robes in Australian life are now marked by institutional paedophilia by others — and a bullseye. Pell himself seemed slow to recognise this shift in perceptions — or unwilling to accept it.

He replaced Frank Little as Archbishop of Melbourne in 1996; only after death was Little’s shameful pattern of shielding criminal priests, and multiplying evils committed against children, exposed.

“One or two lonely voices have suggested that the Catholic Church here is in a state of crisis,” Pell said on assuming the position. “They are badly mistaken.”

Pell resisted calls for a royal commission for decades. The first groundswell followed an own goal — Pell’s decision to accompany Father Gerald Ridsdale, in sunglasses and white suit, to a Melbourne court for multiple sex crimes against children in 1993. Pell has never shaken off the implied symbolism in that choice, that for him and his church priestly welfare comes before victims’ needs.

Pell later admitted this decision was a “mistake”. Yet almost a decade later, after former Archbishop of Brisbane Peter Hollingworth fumbled questions of his handling of abuse in the Anglican Church, Pell still rejected the need for a royal commission.

A decade further on, after Victoria Police released suicide figures for Ballarat victims of Catholic clergy, and official rumblings grew in NSW, Pell remained adamant. Victims had received justice when the church had given them “due procedure and apologised”, he said.

Pell instituted his Melbourne Response in 1996, which he heralded with a “sincere, unreserved and public apology”. Victims could come to the church for care and compensation — then capped at $50,000, but later lifted. This was an alternative to litigation, but in successful claims the church would make no admission of liability. Victims were free to go to the police, but it later became clear that the church would not encourage them to do so.

Pell always trumpeted his mechanism. He described it as an international benchmark. Victims, however, said they believed the process was bullying.

They were compelled to sign away the possibility of later legal claims.

Many victims told the Victorian parliamentary inquiry that they felt traumatised by the process.

Even now, victim advocates reflexively groan at its mention. The Fosters had a compelling case, including documents showing that the church had known about Fr O’Donnell’s offending for 40 years. Pell had given them a written apology. The Fosters had rejected a $50,000 offer. Finally, they were awarded $750,000 plus costs — after a nine-year legal battle. Marr compared the average payout under the Melbourne Response — about $32,500 — to the more than $1 million paid per victim by the church in America.

OVER the past few years, claims that go to Pell’s intentions have been put again and again but none have ever been proven.

The optics are stark. In court-rooms, men sob for the futures they say were stolen from them as children. They recite times and dates and statements. To each claim, Pell is compelled to counter-claim.

Did Pell try and buy the silence of Ridsdale nephew David, as the prominent victim has alleged?

Did he knowingly move Gerald Ridsdale around the Ballarat archdiocese? Was he negligent in his handling of abuse claims while he was Archbishop of Melbourne?

Evidence was given recently that Pell was overheard speaking in 1983 about Ridsdale’s shocking behaviour. Pell responded by disputing his presence at the time of his alleged remarks.
Pell has been issuing regular denials since 2002.

The David Ridsdale claim has haunted Pell since a 60 Minutes interview at that time. He has consistently argued that it makes little sense to offer a bribe when the offender had already been exposed for so many crimes.

Another claim, raised publicly at about the same time, traces back to the early 1970s and a then 12-year-old boy. A now middle-aged man, he told the media that he had informed Pell about the abuses of Brother Ted Dowlan, to which Pell had replied that he was being ridiculous. Pell would respond that he had no memory of such a conversation.

Pell has twice testified before the royal commission. He has been consistent throughout the years. He was unaware that Ridsdale was a paedophile in the early 1970s despite their close contact.

“I lived there with him and there was not even a whisper,” he said in the 1990s.

To claims of problems when he ran the Melbourne archdiocese, he has always argued that he could act only on evidence, not gossip.

Pell is the royal commission’s central figure, no matter whether he appears in person.

When Gerald Ridsdale gave video evidence last year, victims hoped for more than uncomfortable insights into depravity. They wanted to hear about the year Ridsdale and Pell lived together at the St Alipius presbytery in Ballarat in the early 1970s.

They itched to gather insights into a man who has always claimed an instinctive remove from evil.

The victims were disappointed.

IN 1961, he was known as Big George. Pell was one of the Werribee seminarians in charge of 40 kids, among them an 11-year-old. This boy decades later recalled Pell as a “gentle” and “kind” man who told the boys he had played in the ruck for Richmond. According to the boy, Big George changed. The boy would light a fire at the camp which would be doused by the CFA. He called it an act of revenge, committed with another boy. That second boy claimed he had told Big George to go away when he had tried to molest him.

It was decades before anyone heard such tales.

A retired Supreme Court judge, Alec Southwell, headed the inquiry. Pell, by then the Archbishop of Sydney, stood aside while the complaint was heard. Pell said the allegations were lies.

He denied them “utterly and totally”. “I believe completely George Pell’s denial,” said then prime minister John Howard.

Southwell’s findings were that the allegations could not be substantiated.

The complainant vowed to walk away from public scrutiny. He had what he needed, he said
through his lawyer. Pell still talks about the case — Friday’s statement referred to his being “exonerated”.

At the time, he spoke about drawing on beliefs that may once again — 14 years later — become critical to his wellbeing.

“When a person is under extreme pressure, personal values may crumble,” he said.

“However my Catholic convictions sustained me during these dark weeks.”

patrick.carlyon@news.com.au

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‘Molester’ Priest Keen on Parish Role

INDIA
The New Indian Express

By Rohan Premkumar Published: 21st February 2016

COIMBATORE: His suspension has been lifted by the Catholic church, and convicted child sex offender Joseph Palanivel Jeyapaul is hoping to be in charge of a parish soon.

The man, accused of molesting two teenage girls in Crookston, Minnesota, when he was an extern priest there, told Express over phone that he had returned to India as the church he was in charge of, in the US, was only a temporary posting.

In June 2015, Jeyapaul was sentenced to a year in prison for sexually abusing a 16-year-old girl, though he did not have to spend time in prison as he had already been incarcerated while awaiting trial. He was soon deported back, after which the Vatican revoked his suspension.

He did not disclose details of the allegations or the trial, due to which he fled from the country and returned to the Diocese of Ootacamund.

Jeyapaul claims to be in Ooty, though the Catholic Church has stated that he has been “away on leave”, with some officials indicating that he is in Karnataka.

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The hidden shame of St Benedict’s

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Tim Clarke
February 21, 2016

For Roman Catholic Bishop Max Davis, the detached township of New Norcia – established in 1846 by Benedictine missionary Rosendo Salvado – was where his religious calling was realised.

And for most of the boys he schooled during his time as a teacher and dean of discipline at St Benedict’s boys college in the town, he was remembered as a firm but fair master who could cane and comfort in the same day.

Others, however, held very different memories of the young priest known as “Bang Bang”.

Last week, five St Benedict’s old boys unequivocally named the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Australian Catholic Defence Diocese as their sexual abuser of nearly 50 years ago. And despite the passage of time, they could not have been clearer in their recollection.

“That’s a definite remembrance, there’s no reconstruction there. I remember exactly who’s done it -Brother Max,” said one.

“The person who abused me was with the church – the person who abused me was Max Davis,” said another.

Those recollections made up the core of the case against Bishop Davis, who became the most senior Australian Catholic figure to ever face sexual abuse charges when he came before WA’s District Court.

But this week, those memories were dismissed by a jury, who cleared the Bishop of all six allegations, recounted by five men who did not know each other, but who all thought they knew who had abused them.

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El juez pide a los Maristas una póliza para indemnizar a las víctimas

ESPANA
El Pais

[The judge asks the Marist for a policy to compensate victims of abuse.]

El juez que instruye la causa contra el exprofesor de gimnasia y pederasta confeso, Joaquín Benítez, aceptó ayer la petición efectuada por algunas de las víctimas y pidió a la escuela Maristas de Sants-Les Corts que aporte las pólizas aseguradoras que ha tenido contratadas entre 1983 hasta la actualidad.

Iván Fernández, el letrado de la acusación particular que representa, al menos, a seis víctimas considera que el colegio tiene responsabilidad sobre los abusos y agresiones sexuales cometidas por sus empleados y debe responder, al menos civilmente, por esos delitos. A principios de semana solicitó la presentación de la póliza y ayer el magistrado admitió la petición.

La instrucción de caso comienza a apuntar al colegio como responsable y trunca la idea del centro de personarse como acusación particular, a lo que ya se había opuesto las víctimas.

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El Síndic denuncia una cadena de fallos en el ‘caso Maristas’

ESPANA
El Pais

[Resolució de l’expedient AO-00016/2016 relativa a la informació apareguda als mitjans de comunicació en relació amb abusos soferts per alumnes d’un professor d’un centre educatiu de Barcelona]

[The ombudsman claims a string of failures in the ‘Marist case’ in Spain. The protocol against sexual abuse was worthless in cases of pedophilia that have happened in Barcelona’s Sants-Marist College Les Corts. This is the conclusion of the performance of the Office of Ombudsman and was presented yesterday.]

Barcelona 17 FEB 2016

El protocolo en contra del abuso sexual de menores fue papel mojado en los casos de pederastia que han sucedido en el colegio barcelonés Maristas Sants-Les Corts. Esta es la conclusión de la actuación de oficio del Síndic de Greuges y que fue presentada ayer tras una reunión con la Generalitat y la justicia. Ni los departamentos de Bienestar Social y Enseñanza, ni los Mossos d’Esquadra, ni la Fiscalía ni el centro educativo cumplieron con lo que indica el texto, redactado en 2006. “No hubo una respuesta como Govern”, lamentó Rafael Ribó.

Para el defensor del pueblo catalán en todos los casos “se ha desatendido el principio de interés superior del menor”, consagrado en diferentes tratados internacionales. Se trata de un concepto que obliga a los Gobiernos a que sus funciones tengan como objetivo la protección de los niños. Ribó cree que tanto que los Maristas como la Fiscalía y los mossos no cumplieron con este principio al no investigar si había más víctimas del exprofesor Joaquín Benítez, que trabajó en el centro hasta 2011, durante 30 años, y que ha confesado que abusó de al menos dos estudiantes. Las denuncias ante la policía catalana por abusos en el centro educativo y que involucran a otros tres profesores (incluido un directivo que fue cesado) ya llegan a la veintena.

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Destituyen a sacerdote pederasta

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Periódico AM Noticias [León, Guanajuato, Mexico]

February 20, 2016

By Apro

Read original article

El padre Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga fue destituido de su ministerio y expulsado del estado clerical, por denuncias de abuso sexual infantil en su contra.

El sacerdote Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga fue destituido de su ministerio y expulsado del estado clerical, por denuncias de abuso sexual infantil en su contra.

El religioso es fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el Signo de la Cruz (MECM) y asentó esa asociación en Quintana Roo, aunque sin reconocimiento oficial.

El Obispo de la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, Pedro Elizondo, informó que la destitución se da luego de la condena del Papa Francisco a la pederastia y el compromiso de que no se encubrirán casos que involucren a curas.

El también miembro de Los Legionarios de Cristo, reveló que el decreto de la Arquidiócesis Primada de México con notificación de la medida sancionatoria data de hace dos años, cuando Monroy Camiruaga fue inhabilitado en Tlalnepantla, Estado de México.

“Ellos me estuvieron insistiendo que había una apelación y que esa no era válida, y yo he estado investigando y dando tiempo al tiempo que se revoque la sentencia, pero después de años que no se revoca la sentencia, pues yo pienso que ya no se va revocar, pero me equivoqué”, indicó.

De acuerdo con el Obispo Pedro Elizondo Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga nunca prestó servicios como sacerdote en Cancún.

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Abuse Survivor Megan Peterson on Pope Francis’s Recent Statement About Holding Bishops Accountable: Actions Talk Louder Than Words

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

In what I posted earlier today about Pope Francis’s recent statement that a bishop who moves a priest to another parish when a case of pedophilia is discovered is irresponsible man and should resign, I stated,

But, of course, if that statement is to have teeth, then the Vatican needs to get cracking right away and do everything it can to assure that such bishops do resign. Which would make for a huge number of episcopal sees for the Vatican to fill down the road from the crop of resignations . . . .

And then I referred to the case of Bishop Arulappan Amalraj of Ootacamund, India, who recently placed Father Joseph Jeyapaul back in ministry — with Vatican approval — though Jeyapaul has been convicted of sexually assaulting a teenaged girl in Minnesota.

Here’s an excerpt from the very important response of Megan Peterson, who was sexually abused by Father Jeyapaul, to what Pope Francis has just said:

Yesterday, Pope Francis added insult to injury when he said a bishop who transfers a predator should resign and asked “Is that clear?” Just days ago, the Vatican lifted the suspension of my perpetrator, even though he was pled guilty to child sex crimes. So, no, Francis, you are NOT clear. Your words do not match your actions.

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Addressing a known potential threat in church

UNITED STATES
The Mennonite

2.17. 2016 Written By: Dr. Trudy Good

Dr. Trudy Good is a clinical psychologist who has worked extensively in community mental health in Illinois and Massachusetts. She has a long-standing concern for how churches can be safe havens for children and persons who are marginalized. Her clinical expertise includes working with people with a history of trauma, problematic sexual behaviors, and clinical risk management, and she has consulted and volunteered concerning organizational issues in several congregations. Dr. Good is the director of Good Havens: Safer Places. She participates in the Mennonite Congregation of Boston as well as St. Ignatius Catholic Church. She can be contacted at trudygood@gmail.com. This piece was originally published by Dove’s Nest.

Safe Church policies and procedures should include two important efforts:

First, Safe Church is about preventing abuse of children and vulnerable members.

Second, Safe Church is about protecting children and vulnerable members when there is a known potential threat.

A potential threat occurs when someone who has a known history of inappropriate or illegal sexual behavior is participating in the congregation or wants to participate in the congregation.

Here are a few examples:

* The new boyfriend of a single mother in the congregation has a history of interaction with the Department of Children and Family Services because of inappropriate touching of a niece whose family he was living with at the time. The boyfriend has begun attending church with the single mother and her children.

* A cousin of a congregational member is going to be released from jail after serving time for repeated indecent exposures to children. He is a registered sex offender and on probation for the next two years. He and his cousin have talked about how it would be helpful to have him be part of a faith community again, especially to help in his transition process of living in the community.

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Cardinal and bishop allowed known paedophile priest to move from parish to parish

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 21, 2016

Tim Barlass
Senior writer

The victim of a paedophile priest told a court that the then Cardinal of the Sydney archdiocese and a high-ranking bishop allowed the perpetrator to move on to other parishes despite knowing he had sexually abused a young boy.

Reading from his victim impact statement at the Downing Centre court on Friday the one time altar boy, now grown up, struggled to control his emotions as he told how the assault had ruined his life.

“I heard the names of these so-called leaders during the trial, namely Cardinal James Freeman and Bishop Edward Kelly,” he said. “I never had any contact with them but their decisions have impacted on my life,” he said.

“[They] knew that he had sexually abused a young boy and all they did was move him from parish to parish to give him new young boys to manipulate and abuse without having any restraints put on him.

“Instead they promoted him to being youth leader and parish priest to make it easier for him to get into situations where he would be left alone in one-to-one contact with young boys.”

Father Robert Flaherty, aged 72, sat in the dock with both hands resting on the handle of a walking stick but showed no reaction to the statement or that of a second victim read on his behalf by his sister.

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Fridley priest on leave after police search his home

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Peter Cox Feb 20, 2016

A priest at a Fridley, Minn., parish is on leave following a search of his home by Edina Police.

The pastor at the Church of Saint William in Fridley has taken a voluntary leave of absence pending the outcome of an investigation, according to a statement by Twin Cities Archbishop Bernard Hebda.

The pastor is not allowed to exercise priestly ministry while on leave. The archdiocese assigned priests to help continue day-to-day parish operations and to celebrate masses.

Edina police say they executed a search warrant at the priest’s home and another search is likely. Police were investigating a late December tip about suspicious activity. The archdiocese office that deals with sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable adults is cooperating with police, Hebda said.

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STATEMENT ON THE FILM “SPOTLIGHT”

SOUTH AFRICA
South African Bishops’ Conference

The film Spotlight chronicles the story of how investigative journalists revealed a dark and shameful time in the history of the Catholic Church. The revelations were made in Boston, USA, but it soon became evident that this was a worldwide scandal for the Catholic Church.

The release of the film in South Africa can be an especially painful time for survivors of sexual abuse by clergy. The Church continues to seek forgiveness for the harm that the crime of the abuse of minors has caused.

Although painful, the Church acknowledges the role that journalists and victims played in helping to uncover paedophile clergy. Some victims suffered even more when families, society, authorities and leaders in the Church did not believe their stories. Openness and transparency is the only way that the evil of abuse can be confronted and dealt with. Sexual abuse must be exposed; it is a heinous crime.

The Catholic Church is committed to take responsibility for its failings and reforming itself so that what was shameful and hidden can be dealt with. The Church is committed to the protection of children first.

The Church in Southern Africa, under the direction of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference, has setup a Professional Conduct Committee which has drawn up strict protocols to ensure that it deals with any allegations of abuse in a responsible and transparent way and in compliance with civil law.

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A community hopes for closure after arrest of priest in 1960 killing of beauty queen

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

By Lynn Brezosky
February 20, 2016

McALLEN — A greeter at Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Peter Pranis straightens with pride when asked about the stately brick sanctuary, its bell tower rising above downtown and its panels of stained glass that soften the rays of the harsh South Texas sunlight.

But when asked about what allegedly happened in the basement of the church rectory 56 years ago, his tone flattens to a near whisper.

“People are very reluctant to talk about it,” Pranis said of the 1960 sexual assault and slaying of Irene Garza, a 25-year-old schoolteacher and former beauty queen who arrived at the church to say confession and was never seen again. “It is very raw.”

Earlier this month, long after many parishioners had lost hope of a resolution in the high-profile case, authorities in Arizona arrested a former priest and charged him with Garza’s death. John Feit, now an old man at 83, is being held on a $750,000 bond while awaiting an extradition hearing scheduled for Wednesday.

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A sexual abuse survivor’s questions for Cardinal George Pell

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

February 20, 2016

Jim Boyle

Cardinal George Pell is in a unique position to assist a better understanding of how the Catholic Church leadership in Ballarat, Melbourne, Sydney and Rome responded to allegations and instances of clerical sexual abuse of children and vulnerable adults.

Let’s look at some topics where complete, honest and forthright answers in his pending testimony to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse would be welcome.

How much did Father Pell know of any possible abuses by Gerald Ridsdale​ in Swan Hill when Pell followed him in that parish?

How much did he know of abusers in St Alipius​’ parish when he shared a house with Ridsdale, and of the many other abusers in Ballarat including Day, Claffey​, Coffey, Farrell, Fitzgerald, Morey, Parker, Ryan, Sheahan​, Toomey, Ring, and Sproules?

How much did he know, what did he do, and how were situations actually handled when he was a consultor​ to Bishop Mulkearns​ and advised the bishop regarding parish appointments?

The cardinal says that when he was an assistant bishop in Melbourne, all authority (“competence”) resided with Archbishop Little until the archbishop’s health failed and Pell succeeded him. The Cardinal could explain how much he and other senior clergy knew of then-current abuse cases, and exactly what responsibility they accepted and what actions they undertook alongside Archbishop Little.

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Les évêques d’Afrique du Sud mobilisés contre les abus sexuels

AFRIQUE
Radio Vatican

[The bishops of South Africa have mobilized against sexual abuse]

(RV) Les efforts de sensibilisation déployés par les instances vaticanes auprès des épiscopats locaux portent leurs fruits : à leur tour, les évêques sud-africains ont opté pour l’ouverture et la transparence la plus totale, dans les cas d’abus sexuels sur mineurs. Dans une note diffusée à l’occasion de la sortie du film Spotlight, la conférence épiscopale sud-africaine salue le rôle joué par les journalistes et les victimes pour démasquer la pédophilie dans l’Église.

Ce film américain retrace l’enquête du Boston Globe qui a mis à jour le scandale sans précédent qui a éclaboussé et bouleversé le diocèse de Boston. Une équipe de journalistes d’investigation a enquêté pendant 12 mois sur des allégations d’abus sexuels au sein de l’Église catholique. Obstinés, ils sont parvenus, non sans mal, à faire parler les victimes des prêtres agresseurs et à découvrir que l’institution avait protégé volontairement pendant des décennies les membres du clergé. Cette enquête a déclenché par la suite une vague de révélations dans le monde entier.

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Der Kampf gegen Missbrauch wird noch lange dauern

DEUTSCHLAND
Zeit

[The fight against abuse will be long]

Ein Gastbeitrag von Hans Zollner

18. Februar 2016

Alle diese Fälle sind erschütternd. Besonders bewegt und empört aber hat mich die Geschichte von Marie Collins, meiner Kollegin in der päpstlichen Kinderschutzkommission. Sie sprach auf unserem ersten großen Treffen an der Universität Gregoriana 2012. Marie erzählte, wie sie als 13-Jährige von einem Kaplan missbraucht wurde, als sie im Krankenhaus lag. Ich weiß nicht, woher sie den Mut nahm, im Beisein ihres Mannes vor 120 Bischöfen und 35 Ordensoberen die Übergriffe des Täters zu beschreiben – dazu das Versagen der kirchlichen Stellen. Die trugen nicht nur dazu bei, dass Marie jahrzehntelang allein war mit ihrem Leid und sich sogar Selbstvorwürfe machte. Sie waren auch schuld, dass der Täter weitere Jugendliche missbrauchte.

Von vielen Bischöfen habe ich gehört, dass die Begegnung mit Marie Collins für sie ein Wendepunkt war. Von da an konnten sie die Opfer nicht mehr ignorieren. Doch weiter kommt Schreckliches ans Licht. Zuletzt: sexuelle Gewalt, die im Bistum Hildesheim verübt wurde, und verschiedene Arten von Missbrauch, unter denen Hunderte Domspatzen gelitten haben.

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Die fröhliche Plauderei des Papstes

DEUTSCHLAND
Zeit

[The cheerful chatter of the Pope]

Von Raoul Löbbert

Erreicht Papst Franziskus päpstliche Reiseflughöhe, kann kein Medienberater ihn mehr stoppen. Dann reißt er schon mal in einer spontanen Pressekonferenz Witze über sich wie Karnickel vermehrende Katholiken, beichtet Mitreisenden seine Neurosen oder spricht, wie gerade erst, dem amerikanischen Präsidentschaftskandidaten Donald Trump das Christsein ab, weil der an der mexikanischen Grenze lieber Mauern als Brücken errichten würde.

Für uns Journalisten sind Donald Trump und Franziskus Geschenke des Himmels. Beide produzieren in Serie vermeintlich starke Sätze, bei denen sich selbst die Wohlgesonnensten fragen, ob die beiden wissen, was sie sagen und tun. Im Falle von Papst Franziskus jedoch muss eingeräumt werden: Vieles von dem, was er während seiner Pressekonferenzen über den Wolken von sich gibt, haben andere Päpste inhaltlich auch schon gesagt – nur schriftlich, manchmal mit Fußnoten versehen und bereinigt vom Makel der Spontaneität.

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Le scandale absolu des prêtres et religieux pédophiles

BELGIQUE
Belgicatho

[The absolute scandal of pedophile priests and religious]

Plusieurs nouveaux cas de pédophilie dont se sont rendus coupables des membres du clergé ont à nouveau défrayé la chronique durant ces derniers jours. On saluera, à ce propos, le courage d’Eric de Beukelaer, doyen du centre-ville de Liège, qui a accepté de rencontrer sur un plateau de télévision les mères de deux victimes et de répondre aux rudes interpellations du présentateur. Et que pouvait-il faire d’autre sinon exprimer notre honte et notre tristesse face à des comportements que rien ne peut justifier? On retiendra aussi son appel en faveur d’un environnement affectif équilibrant dont doivent bénéficier ceux qui se sont engagés dans un célibat consacré; à ce propos, nous pouvons nous interroger sur la façon dont nous entourons et soutenons nos prêtres…

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Waar dient de anti-misbruikcommissie toe?

VATICAAN
Katholiek Nieuwsblad

[Where the anti-abuse commission should go?]

Zolang de Kerk niet in het reine komt met seksueel misbruik, zal zij erdoor gegeseld worden en zware wonden toebrengen aan haar eigen geloofwaardigheid. Zijn er nieuwe onthullingen? Nee, wel ongerijmdheden.

Dat betreft niet het onvrijwillige verlof van Peter Saunders, lid van de Pauselijke Commissie voor de Bescherming van Minderjarigen en zelf slachtoffer van seksueel misbruik.

Scheldkannonade

Dat Saunders aan de kant is gezet hoeft niet te verbazen. Vorig jaar zomer hield hij een publieke scheldkanonnade tegen kardinaal Pell omdat deze als aartsbisschop fouten zou hebben gemaakt in een misbruikzaak.

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Le pape n’appelle pas le cardinal Barbarin à démissionner

FRANCE
Riposte Catholique

[The pope did not call on Cardinal Barbarin to resign.]

Dans l’avion du retour du Mexique, lors de la traditionnelle séance avec les journalistes, le pape François a répondu ainsi à une question sur les problèmes d’abus sexuels commis par des prêtres

« Un évêque qui déplace un prêtre dans une autre paroisse quand un cas de pédophilie a été découvert, est un homme inconscient et la meilleure chose qu’il puisse faire c’est de présenter sa démission. C’est clair ? »

Evidemment, et il fallait s’y attendre, toute la presse a vu là une condamnation du cardinal Barbarin, archevêque de Lyon, appelé à démissionner par le pape lui-même pour n’avoir pas suspendu un prêtre qui avait commis des abus sexuels 20 ans plus tôt.

Le directeur du Bureau de presse du Saint-Siège a dû expliciter les propos du Souverain Pontife et prendre la défense du cardinal français Philippe Barbarin :

“Je ne pense pas que cette réponse du pape puisse se référer à ce cas“. “Selon moi, cela n’a absolument aucun fondement“. “La question a été posée par un journaliste mexicain qui avait à l’esprit le cas du père Maciel (fondateur des Légionnaires du Christ) ou ceux des Etats-Unis“.

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Der Ausgestoßene

DEUTSCHLAND
Christ und Welt

Peter Saunders saß als Missbrauchsopfer in der Kinderschutzkommission des Vatikans. Er wollte helfen, die Sexverbrechen aufzuklären. Jetzt wollen die Verantwortlichen nichts mehr mit ihm zu tun haben. Hat er von der katholischen Kirche zu viel verlangt?

Christ&Welt: Die päpstliche Kinderschutzkommission, der Sie als Betroffener angehören und die im Zuge der Missbrauchsskandale in der Kirche eingerichtet wurde, hat Sie »freigestellt«. War das ein verkappter Rauswurf?

Peter Saunders: Nein, ich bin weiterhin Mitglied der Kommission. Der Papst hat mich berufen, also kann mich auch nur der Papst aus der Kommission abberufen. Die Mitglieder sagten, sie fühlten sich von mir hintergangen, weil ich wiederholt mit der Presse gesprochen hatte. Ich hätte die Kommission in ein schlechtes Licht gerückt.

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Frequent-flyer George Pell is avoiding a PUBLIC visit to Australia at present. Why?

AUSTRALIA
Broken Rites

By a Broken Rites researcher, article updated 19 February 2016

Cardinal George Pell makes frequent trips away from his Rome headquarters. For example, in March-April 2015, he made a secret trip by air to Australia, and then he returned to Rome in time to “appear” by video-link (instead of really appearing in person) for a public hearing of Australia’s national child-abuse Royal Commission a few weeks later (in May 2015). The Commissioners had approved Pell’s May 2015 video-link because of the long distance if Pell had to fly to Australia from Rome. The Commissioners did not know of Pell’s recent secret trip but the trip became known by the time of the May 2015 hearing. And Pell’s video-link in May 2015 turned out to be a technological disaster. The Commissioners then asked Pell to appear in person at his next scheduled public hearing in Australia (in December 2015) but Pell refused and his lawyers submitted a “sick note” (signed by one of his own doctors, not an independent one), citing his long-standing “health problems” (as a 74-year-old man) as grounds for getting yet another video-link. Meanwhile, a few weeks before his December 2015 “sick note”, Pell travelled from Rome to France to tour the World War One battlefields (but Pell doesn’t have “health problems” in France, only in Australia). Pell’s next non-appearance by video-link is to be on 29 February 2016. Thus, Pell seems to be in no hurry to re-visit Australia while civil investigations are under way into allegations about clergy sexual abuse and allegations about the church’s culture of cover-up.

Pell’s secret trip to Australia in March-April 2015 included a visit to his home town, Ballarat, which is the town at the centre of church-abuse allegations (and the cover-up) in western Victoria. Pell’s trip was revealed in the April 2015 edition of the magazine of St Patrick’s College, Ballarat — the school where Pell had been a pupil. The magazine article, which has been seen by Broken Rites, indicates that Pell’s visit to the school occurred about 27 March 2015, “during a short vacation in Australia”. There is a photo of Pell, together with headmaster John Crowley, while touring the school to see its latest extensions.

The editors of this school magazine didn’t realise that, by revealing Pell’s visit, they were “letting the cat out of the bag”. News of the school magazine article (and the secret trip) reached journalists in Australia during the Commission’s May 2015 public hearing.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Francis McGrath

UNITED STATES
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: After completing seminary training in the Archdiocese of Baltimore, Francis McGrath was ordained for the Diocese of Trenton NJ in 1978. He assisted parishes in Redbank, Trenton and Tom’s River, and he served for a time as chaplain at McCorriston High School. In 1995 a man reported to the Archdiocese of Baltimore that McGrath had sexually abused him as a minor in the early 1970s, when McGrath was a seminarian. The archdiocese informed the Diocese of Trenton; McGrath admitted to the sexual abuse of “three or four victims” during his time in Trenton, and went on leave. The Official Catholic Directory shows McGrath as “Absent on Leave” through 2002, the year another individual alleged abuse by McGrath, in the mid-1970s.

Ordained: 1978

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Catholic priest to stop saying mass at Melbourne primary school after parent backlash

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Danny Morgan
Updated February 20, 2016

A Catholic priest will stop saying mass at a Melbourne primary school where parents have pulled their children out of the fortnightly service as part of a protest over sexual abuse allegations.

Earlier this month dozens of parents would not allow their children to attend a school mass at St John Vianney Primary in Parkdale.

They said they had lost faith in their parish priest, Father John Walshe, following revelations last year that a Catholic Church investigation accepted he had sexually abused an 18-year-old trainee priest in 1982.

Father Walshe denies he abused the seminarian, saying their relationship was consensual.

In this week’s St John Vianney school newsletter the principal informed parents that Father Walshe would not be celebrating the fortnightly mass for the time being, with an associate priest stepping in.

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Fridley priest on leave amid Edina police investigation

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

A Fridley priest is on leave pending the outcome of a police investigation in Edina, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis said Friday.

According to a statement from the archdiocese, the Rev. Timothy Dolan, pastor at the Church of St. William in Fridley, is the subject of an investigation by the Edina Police Department.

Dolan has taken a “voluntary leave of absence” during the investigation, which was not detailed by the archdiocese.

The archdiocese said its Office of Ministerial Standards and Safe Environment is cooperating with Edina police. It said Dolan also was believed to be cooperating with investigators.

Accord to an Edina police spokeswoman, authorities began an investigation after receiving “a complaint Dec. 31 of suspicious activity involving Dolan, who maintains a residence in Edina.”

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Archbishop: Priest On Leave During Police Investigation

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

[with video]

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — A Twin Cities priest is on leave during a police investigation.

Archbishop Bernard Hebda released a statement Friday that said Rev. Timothy Dolan is under investigation in Edina, where he resides.

Dolan serves at the Church of St. William in Fridley.

Hebda also said Dolan took a voluntary leave of absence Thursday night, and he is not allowed to minister.

The Star Tribune reports police searched his home for child pornography, but it is not known if they found anything.

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Priest’s Edina home is searched after neighbors get suspicious

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune FEBRUARY 19, 2016

The Edina home of a priest who serves a Catholic church in Fridley was searched this week by police investigating possible possession of child pornography.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis informed members of the Church of St. William in Fridley Friday night, shortly after the Star Tribune contacted them about the investigation.

Because the priest has not been arrested or charged, the Star Tribune is not naming him.

Neighbors at his Edina apartment complex called police four times in the past few years about what they said were the sounds of a child crying and “in distress” coming from his apartment. The most recent report was on Feb. 8.

Police investigated each time, but did not find a child in the priest’s apartment. But in an interview with Edina police this week, the priest admitted he had pornography on his computer, according to the search warrant request. The search sought evidence of possession or distribution of child pornography.

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Fridley priest under investigation by Edina PD

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

EDINA, Minn. (KMSP) – The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis confirmed Friday they are aware Edina Police Department is investigating a Fridley priest, Rev. Timothy Dolan.

The Star Tribune, who did not name him, reported police are investigating allegations that a pastor at the Church of Saint William in Fridley possessed child pornography. The paper said his apartment was searched on Thursday, adding neighbors at his complex had called police three times in the past few years reporting sounds of a child “in distress.”

Full statement from From Archbishop Bernard Hebda

“The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis has received information from the Edina Police Department that an investigation is underway that involves Rev. Timothy Dolan, pastor at the Church of Saint William in Fridley. Last evening, Father Dolan took a voluntary leave of absence pending the outcome of the investigation. While on leave, Father Dolan is not permitted to exercise priestly ministry. He is afforded the presumption of innocence.

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Statement Regarding Rev. Timothy Dolan

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date: Friday, February 19, 2016

Source: Tom Halden, Director of Communications

From Archbishop Bernard Hebda

The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis has received information from the Edina Police Department that an investigation is underway that involves Rev. Timothy Dolan, pastor at the Church of Saint William in Fridley. Last evening, Father Dolan took a voluntary leave of absence pending the outcome of the investigation. While on leave, Father Dolan is not permitted to exercise priestly ministry. He is afforded the presumption of innocence.

The Archdiocesan Office of Ministerial Standards and Safe Environment has cooperated, and continues to cooperate, with the Edina Police Department. Our understanding is that Father Dolan has been cooperative, as well. To protect the integrity of the investigation, and at the request of the Edina Police Department, the Archdiocese will not comment further at this time.

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Fridley Priest Investigation Underway

MINNESOTA
KSTP

Sarah Thamer
Updated: 02/19/2016

An investigation involving a Fridley pastor is underway, according to the Edina Police Department.

The Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis were told by Edina PD that Rev. Timothy Dolan of the Church of St. William in Fridley, took a voluntary leave of absence Thursday evening.

Edina police said they received a report of suspicious activity on Dec. 31, 2015.

Dolan has not been arrested or charged, as police are still investigating.

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Cardinal George Pell must humble himself in abuse hearings in Rome

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Editorial

The royal commission has excused George Pell from appearing in person to answer questions connected to how the Catholic Church dealt with the abuse of children in the diocese of Ballarat – but this week he faced the music nevertheless. A catchy, pull-no-punches ditty from multi-talented performer Tim Minchin challenged him to get on a plane to answer the commission’s questions in person and called him a coward for not making the trip.

It helped raise $190,000 in four days to send survivors of abuse to Rome with the hope they can sit in on the cardinal’s testimony when he gives it by video link later this month. Their desire is simple: they want the cardinal, whose doctors have given evidence he is too ill to fly back to Australia, to face the same conditions as they did when appearing before the commission.

But the cardinal’s response was typically jarring, hiding behind procedure and lacking in the instinctive emotional intelligence, indeed humility, most of us want from our religious leaders, particularly those from an institution which has so profoundly failed some of its most vulnerable parishioners.

Cardinal Pell said he was prepared to meet the victims but that it was up to the commission to determine the arrangements for the video-link hearings. What stopped the cardinal from saying he understood the victims’ point of view and would urge the commission to allow them to listen to his evidence or would use his position as the Vatican’s third most senior official to help it find a suitable venue?

Worse, his statement read: “The cardinal has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally.” As survivor David Ridsdale said: “That sounds to me like Cardinal Pell is blowing his own trumpet.” And it is not supported by the recollections of victims.

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Cardinal George Pell’s full statement

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Cardinal George Pell’s full statement:

LEAKED ALLEGATIONS SPURIOUS AND FALSE – CARDINAL GEORGE PELL

Cardinal Pell is due to give evidence to the Royal Commission in just over one week.

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 allegations are without foundation and utterly false.

It is outrageous that these allegations have been brought to the Cardinal’s attention through a media leak. These undetailed allegations have not been raised with the Cardinal by the police and the false claims investigated by Justice Southwell have been ignored by the police for over 15 years, despite the very transparent way they were dealt with by the Cardinal and the Catholic Church.

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Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart supports calls for inquiry into leak against Cardinal George Pell

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart is supporting calls for an independent investigation to find out who leaked details of a reported police investigation into alleged abuse by Cardinal George Pell.

The Herald Sun newspaper published a report that said a Victoria Police taskforce was investigating allegations of abuse by Australia’s most high-profile Catholic.

In a statement, Cardinal Pell vehemently denied the allegations, calling them “undetailed”, and said they had not been raised with him.

Cardinal Pell called for a public inquiry into the source of the leak and Archbishop Hart released a statement defending the cardinal.

“It is very disturbing and concerning to read reports based on leaks to the media,” Archbishop Hart said.

“The allegations do not reflect the man I have known for more than 50 years.

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SCOTT ROSENBLUM

MISSOURI
Berger’s Beat

February 19, 2016 4:58 pm | Author: berger

Barrister Scott Rosenblum has repped several pedophile priests, including Fr. Bryan Kuchar and Fr. Joseph D. Ross. Meanwhile, Rosenblum has become an investor in the proposed topless bar in U.City.

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AFI Grad Michael Rezendes on the True Story of SPOTLIGHT

UNITED STATES
American Film Institute

February 19, 2016

Before Michael Rezendes won a Pulitzer Prize for journalism, he was a Screenwriting alumnus of the AFI Conservatory (Class of 1999). Played by Mark Ruffalo in the Oscar®-nominated SPOTLIGHT, he’s one of a group of Boston Globe reporters who, in 2002, exposed a shattering clergy sex abuse scandal in the Catholic Church. Known collectively as the Spotlight team, they won a Pulitzer Prize for their work. Now, nearly 15 years later, the story has gained international attention once again with the film directed by Tom McCarthy and written by Josh Singer.

AFI spoke with Rezendes about his AFI Conservatory experience, and the making of SPOTLIGHT.

You graduated from AFI Conservatory in 1999, not long before the Spotlight story that inspired the film broke in 2002. How did you transition out of screenwriting and into journalism?

I was on a leave of absence from The Boston Globe while I was at AFI. There was a job waiting for me at the Globe if I wanted it, which was terrific. After receiving an award for the best script written by an AFI Fellow, for $10,000, I was quite enthusiastic about pursuing screenwriting. I went back to the Globe to regroup financially before returning to Los Angeles, when Ben Bradlee, Jr. and Walter Robinson asked me if I wanted to work for the Spotlight team. I thought to myself, if you put me and Ben Bradlee, Jr., and Walter Robinson in the same bottle, something big is going to happen. It was one of the few times in my life when I had a premonition. Sure enough, a year later I was writing that story.

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Pope should put own house in order

UNITED STATES
Mount Airy News

By Tom Joyce – tjoyce@civitasmedia.com

I’ve made a habit of not trashing anyone’s religion, whether it’s a Southern Baptist, Northern Baptist, Western Baptist, Eastern Baptist, Buddhist or atheist who’s involved and, yes, I’ll even include Methodists in the mix.

As I see it, people’s choice of faith, or none at all, is much like their politics — a personal decision based on their own beliefs, influences and life experiences.

All that being said, I do have problems sometimes with how the Catholic church operates, and was reminded of that once again this week as Pope Francis made his holier-than-thou sojourn through Mexico.

Francis has been one of the more outspoken popes on worldwide issues since ascending to the papacy in 2013. But interestingly, this has been limited to criticism of others by the pope while at the same time not tackling ongoing problems in the Catholic church such as pedophile priests who have sexually abused minors, and its archaic position on birth control.

He has gone around lecturing industrialized nations about their role in global warming, which the jury is still out on in many people’s minds as far as its severity. Yet no one can dispute that child molestation is a major problem in today’s world, and it’s one the Catholic church has been woefully derelict in addressing within its own ranks.

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Indictment tacks seven new sex charges against Wayne County pastor

MISSISSIPPI
WDAM

Buckatunna, MS –

An Alabama grand jury indicted a Wayne County pastor Thursday who admitted to sex crimes against children.

The indictment against Tommy Joe Newberry includes seven new charges related to enticing a minor child, sexual abuse, and sodomy.

There are a total of 11 charges against Newberry.

Newberry was arrested in December by the Washington County, Alabama sheriff’s department for similar charges.

Newberry is listed as the pastor at Red Creek Church of God in Buckatunna.

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Report: Teens reveal years of ‘sexual sessions’ with pastor, wife

FLORIDA
CBS 12

BY GARY DETMAN FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19TH 2016

A pastor and his wife are in jail on sex-related charges after a teenager revealed years of “sexual sessions” with them to investigators with the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office.

The teen, now 15, told detectives with the Child Protection Team the abuse at the hands of suspect James Jackson began when she was 11 years old. She said he groomed her by showing her movies. Those movies started to turn sexual, according to her account to investigators. That’s when she said Jackson started to expose himself to her. Eventually, the girl said Jackson made her perform oral sex on him during lessons with him on how to put on a condom. Authorities said the girl’s older sister did the same to her brother. The girl said Jackson performed oral sex on her when she was 12.

Her older sister told investigators she went through a similar grooming process with Jackson starting at the age of 17. She said she had Jackson’s daily “sessions” of baths and sexual intercourse until Nov. 2013. She was 22-years-old at the time.

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Lainie Anderson: Andrew Bolt way off the mark in criticising those cynical at Cardinal George Pell’s reasons for not returning to Australia

AUSTRALIA
The Advertiser

Lainie Anderson
Sunday Mail (SA)

“SHAMEFUL. Disgusting. Frightening.” I think that’s a fair summation of how many of us feel about children being abused at the hands of clergy.

Late last year, Cardinal George Pell claimed he was too ill to return to Australia to appear for a third time before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Debate has raged ever since. Some believe Pell is pulling a fast one, and it certainly makes you wonder how the 74-year-old is managing to hold down a high-powered financial role at the Vatican when his health is so poorly that he can’t catch a business class flight home to Australia.

One cynic is comedian Tim Minchin who, during the week, released a damning song Come Home (Cardinal Pell) to help raise money for Ballarat church abuse victims keen to be in Rome when the Cardinal testifies via video link from February 29.

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Melbourne’s Archbishop ‘appalled’ at public criticism of Cardinal Pell

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne

Thursday 18 February 2016
Media and Communications Office

MELBOURNE’S Archbishop Denis Hart has today released the following statement:

I am appalled at the manner in which Cardinal George Pell has been denigrated publicly this week.

Everyone has a right to a fair hearing. It must be remembered that Cardinal Pell offered to appear at this hearing having already appeared before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse twice previously.

He also appeared before the Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry.

It must be remembered that the Royal Commission controls this process, that it accepted that the Cardinal could give his evidence in Rome due to his health concerns and that the community should allow without interference the Commission to determine how the evidence is going to be taken consistent with its normal process.

At the time that the Royal Commission was announced, the Church committed itself to full cooperation. I am conscious of the opportunity that the Royal Commission provides for victims to tell their stories and for the Church to humbly acknowledge its failings and support the victims in their healing.

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Cardinal George Pell defended by Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart over abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
The Age

[with video]

February 20, 2016

Beau Donelly, Chris Vedelago

Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart has condemned those responsible for leaks to the media suggesting Cardinal George Pell is being investigated over allegations he sexually abused children over 40 years.

Archbishop Hart issued a strongly-worded statement on Saturday in defence of his long-time friend, saying the allegations did not reflect “the man I have known for more than 50 years”.

“It is very disturbing and concerning to read reports based on leaks to the media that Victoria Police has been investigating allegations of abuse against Cardinal George Pell for the past year and that his first knowledge of these allegations has come from those media reports,” he said.

Archbishop Hart claimed the leaks undermined the fairness of the criminal justice system and the presumption of innocence that Cardinal Pell should be afforded. He supported his predecessor’s call for an investigation into the source of the leaks.

In the statement, Archbishop Hart suggests the leaks are part of a coordinated campaign designed to do “maximum damage” to Cardinal Pell. Earlier this week, comedian Tim Minchin blasted Cardinal Pell as scum, a coward and a pompous buffoon in a song he performed during prime time on Network Ten’s The Project.

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Father John Walshe stops saying mass at St John Vianney’s Primary School after parent protest

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 20, 2016

Goya Dmytryshchak

A Catholic priest will no longer conduct mass at a Melbourne primary school after parents withdrew their children in protest over sexual abuse allegations.

Earlier this month, more than 40 parents removed their children from school mass conducted fortnightly by Father John Walshe at St John Vianney’s Primary School in Parkdale.

Father Walshe has been accused of sexually abusing an 18-year-old seminarian in 1982.
He denied the abuse and said the incident was consensual.

The victim received $75,000 in compensation and an apology from the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne.

A school newsletter from St John’s this week informed parents that associate priest, Father Ramsay Williams, would say school mass for the present.

Also this month, about 20 parents withdrew their children from Father Walshe’s weekly mass at Mentone’s St Patrick’s School, which is in the same parish.

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Cardinal Pell strongly denies he abused boys in Australia

ROME
Crux

By Inés San Martín
Vatican correspondent February 19, 2016

ROME — Controversy in Australia over the Vatican’s top financial official intensified on Thursday, with leaked documents suggesting that Cardinal George Pell, already under fire for his response to sex abuse allegations against other clergy, is under investigation himself for the alleged abuse of five to 10 boys.

Pell’s Rome office immediately issued a statement calling those accusations “without foundation and utterly false.”

According to the statement, Pell was investigated for these accusations more than 15 years ago. The result of that query, known in Australia as the Southwell Report after AJ Southwell, the former Australian judge who ran the probe, exonerated Pell. The conclusions, Pell’s statement said, have been in the public domain since 2002.

“He strongly denies any wrongdoing,” the statement said, and “if the police wish to question him he will co-operate, as he has with each and every public inquiry.”

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Glare of the spotlight

UNITED STATES
Reveal: The Center for Investigative Reporting

Oscar season is upon us, and one of the best picture nominees is a film that hits pretty close to home for us at Reveal: “Spotlight.” In case you haven’t seen it yet, it’s a movie about The Boston Globe’s investigative team that exposed the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal.

In this hour of Reveal, we’re going to take you behind the scenes of that investigation, look at the legacy of the groundbreaking story and see how other journalists went on to expose more crimes by Catholic priests around the world.

First up, we tell you what happened after the “Spotlight” movie ended and how The Boston Globe continued to expose cover-ups in the Catholic Church.

In the second segment, Minnesota Public Radio exposes a priest abuse scandal in the Twin Cities, more than a decade after The Globe’s original investigation. Reporter Madeleine Baran spent two years looking into the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and uncovered how the church had been making secret payments to known abusers while continuing to conceal clergy sexual abuse from the public.

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Ballarat prepares for child sexual abuse inquiry while Cardinal Pell stays away

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey

On Monday, survivors of child sexual abuse, their supporters, lawyers, solicitors and representatives of the Catholic church will descend on the bucolic Australian town of Ballarat for the second time in nine months.

The royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse, tasked by the federal government in 2013 to take on the massive job of independently investigating child sexual abuse within churches and other institutions throughout Australia, will once again turn its attention to the Diocese of Ballarat.

Two previous rounds of Ballarat-focussed hearings, one held in the town itself and one in Melbourne, heard evidence from survivors of abuse within the diocese, as well as bishops and priests who were witness to, or responsible for, abusing. This time, the commissioners will question senior religious and educational figures within the diocese.

The hearing will culminate on 29 February when Australia’s most senior Catholic and the financial head of the Vatican, Cardinal George Pell, gives evidence via video-link from Rome. Pell has given evidence before the commission twice previously, the questions asked of him not relating to Ballarat but to the Archdiocese of Melbourne. The first time his evidence was given in person, and the second time, in 2015, via videolink.

This time, things are much different.

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Police ‘investigating allegations Cardinal George Pell sexually abused up to 10 minors over 23 years’ – as he vehemently denies the claims which he says are ‘without foundation and utterly false’

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By Belinda Cleary and Jenny Awford For Daily Mail Australia

Cardinal George Pell allegedly sexually abused up to 10 minors between 1978 and 2001, it has been reported.

The Herald Sun have reported the alleged abuse spanned over 23 years, and occurred both in Ballarat where he was a priest, and in Melbourne where he worked as the archbishop.

Detectives have been working with the alleged victims for over a year – it has been reported they are aged between their late 20s and early 50s.

An earlier explosive Herald Sun report claimed Victoria Police is probing allegations about ‘multiple offences’ committed by the now 74-year-old.

But Cardinal Pell has vehemently denied the allegations, saying they are ‘without foundation and utterly false’, according to a spokesman.

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February 19, 2016

Destituye la Iglesia a sacerdote por abuso sexual en Quintana Roo

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Zócalo [Saltillo, Coahuila de Zaragoza, Mexico]

February 19, 2016

By La Jornada

Read original article

El sacerdote Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga es señalado de abuso sexual infantil, por instrucciones de la Santa Sede fue expulsado.

Cancún, Quintana Roo.- El sacerdote Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga,

fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el

Signo de la Cruz (MECM), es señalado de abuso sexual infantil, por

instrucciones de la Santa Sede fue expulsado de la iglesia clerical, su

movimiento no podrá continuar en Quintana Roo, informó el Obispo de

la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, Monseñor Pedro Pablo Elizondo.

Recordó las palabras del Papa “no tengan miedo a la transparencia de la

iglesia”.

A su llegada a Cancún luego de acompañar al Papa Francisco en la

visita que tuvo por diversas entidades del país, el religioso informó que

la Santa Sede giró instrucciones de su expulsión de la iglesia católica,

de lo cual ya fue notificado por la Arquidiócesis Primada de México por

lo que los otros tres sacerdotes que integraban el MECM, y oficiaban

misa en la Parroquia de la Santa Cruz y San José, en Cancún, podrán

continuar en la prelatura pero solamente como padres diocesanos.

Las 12 religiosas integrantes de la comunidad que igual prestaban sus

servicios en ese movimiento deberán integrarse a otro movimiento o

buscar la aprobación de la diócesis.

Monseñor aclaró que Monroy Camiruaga fue denunciado en el estado

de México , pues en Cancún nunca prestó sus servicios como sacerdote.

Pedro Pablo indicó que en su momento los religiosos solicitaron su

reconocimiento como congregación o movimiento pero no reunieron el

carisma, por lo que se le negó.

Evocó las palabras del Sumo Pontífice quien no va por las multitudes,

sino por el individuo.

Monroy Camiruaga fundó la agrupación en Tlalneplantla, estado de

México, de donde fue expulsado por la Santa Sede hace dos años bajo

cargos de abuso a menores, cuando migró a Cancún, Quintana Roo.

El Obispo reconoció que conocía el caso de Heriberto Monroy pero los

sacerdotes pidieron quedarse en Cancún porque no tuvieron ningún

problema legal, e incluso, anticiparon que apelarían la revocación de la

Santa Sede, pero a dos años no tienen avances.

La agrupación estaba conformada por un sacerdote, dos vicarios y 12

monjas.

Al cuestionarlo por Los Legionarios de Cristo, orden a la cual pertenece

y en donde también hubo denuncias de abuso sexual, afirmó que

Benedicto XVI, hoy Papa Emérito, analizó la congregación y vio que

había una gran escuela junto con un trabajo impecable.

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Destituye la Iglesia a sacerdote por abuso sexual en QR

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
La Jornada Baja California [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 19, 2016

By Patricia Vázquez

Read original article

Cancún, Quintana Roo. – El sacerdote Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga, fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el Signo de la Cruz (MECM), es señalado de abuso sexual infantil, por instrucciones de la Santa Sede fue expulsado de la iglesia clerical, su movimiento no podrá continuar en Quintana Roo, informó el Obispo de la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, Monseñor Pedro Pablo Elizondo. Recordó las palabras del Papa “no tengan miedo a la transparencia de la iglesia”.

A su llegada a Cancún luego de acompañar al Papa Francisco en la visita que tuvo por diversas entidades del país, el religioso informó que la Santa Sede giró instrucciones de su expulsión de la iglesia católica, de lo cual ya fue notificado por la Arquidiócesis Primada de México por lo que los otros tres sacerdotes que integraban el MECM, y oficiaban misa en la Parroquia de la Santa Cruz y San José, en Cancún, podrán continuar en la prelatura pero solamente como padres diocesanos.

Las 12 religiosas integrantes de la comunidad que igual prestaban sus servicios en ese movimiento deberán integrarse a otro movimiento o buscar la aprobación de la diócesis.

Monseñor aclaró que Monroy Camiruaga fue denunciado en el estado de México, pues en Cancún nunca prestó sus servicios como sacerdote.

Pedro Pablo indicó que en su momento los religiosos solicitaron su reconocimiento como congregación o movimiento pero no reunieron el carisma, por lo que se le negó.

Evocó las palabras del Sumo Pontífice quien no va por las multitudes, sino por el individuo.

Monroy Camiruaga fundó la agrupación en Tlalneplantla, estado de México, de donde fue expulsado por la Santa Sede hace dos años bajo cargos de abuso a menores, cuando migró a Cancún, Quintana Roo.

El Obispo reconoció que conocía el caso de Heriberto Monroy pero los sacerdotes pidieron quedarse en Cancún porque no tuvieron ningún problema legal, e incluso, anticiparon que apelarían la revocación de la Santa Sede, pero a dos años no tienen avances.

La agrupación estaba conformada por un sacerdote, dos vicarios y 12 monjas.

Al cuestionarlo por Los Legionarios de Cristo, orden a la cual pertenece y en donde también hubo denuncias de abuso sexual, afirmó que Benedicto XVI, hoy Papa Emérito, analizó la congregación y vio que había una gran escuela junto con un trabajo impecable.

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Cura que abusó de menores en Edomex y Cancún, destituido

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 19, 2016

By Redacción

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CIUDAD DE MÉXICO apro).- Por órdenes del Vaticano, el cura Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga, fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el Signo de la Cruz (MECM), fue destituido por haber cometido abusos sexuales. Así lo informó el obispo de la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, monseñor Pedro Pablo Elizondo, quien precisó que el MECM tampoco podrá continuar en Quintana Roo. A su arribo a Cancún, luego de acompañar al Papa Francisco, quien pidió a los obispos “no tener miedo a la transparencia de la iglesia”, el religioso dijo que la santa sede giró instrucciones para expulsar al cura Monroy Camiruaga de la Iglesia católica, asunto que se notificó a la Arquidiócesis Primada de México. Los otros tres sacerdotes que integran el MECM, dos de ellos vicarios, podrán continuar en la prelatura, pero únicamente como padres diocesanos, mientras las 12 religiosas que integraban la comunidad deberán buscar otro movimiento o la aprobación de la diócesis. El cura Monroy Camiruaga fue denunciado en el Estado de México, donde ejercía su labor pastoral en Tlalnepantla, de donde también fue expulsado hace dos años por abuso a menores, luego de lo cual migró a Cancún.

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Cura que abusó de menores en Edomex y Cancún, destituido

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 19, 2016

By Redacción

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CIUDAD DE MÉXICO apro).- Por órdenes del Vaticano, el cura Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga, fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el Signo de la Cruz (MECM), fue destituido por haber cometido abusos sexuales. Así lo informó el obispo de la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, monseñor Pedro Pablo Elizondo, quien precisó que el MECM tampoco podrá continuar en Quintana Roo. A su arribo a Cancún, luego de acompañar al Papa Francisco, quien pidió a los obispos “no tener miedo a la transparencia de la iglesia”, el religioso dijo que la santa sede giró instrucciones para expulsar al cura Monroy Camiruaga de la Iglesia católica, asunto que se notificó a la Arquidiócesis Primada de México. Los otros tres sacerdotes que integran el MECM, dos de ellos vicarios, podrán continuar en la prelatura, pero únicamente como padres diocesanos, mientras las 12 religiosas que integraban la comunidad deberán buscar otro movimiento o la aprobación de la diócesis. El cura Monroy Camiruaga fue denunciado en el Estado de México, donde ejercía su labor pastoral en Tlalnepantla, de donde también fue expulsado hace dos años por abuso a menores, luego de lo cual migró a Cancún.

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Teen victims say Duggar pastor preyed on rape survivors who sought his help: ‘It’s just evil’

UNITED STATES
Raw Story

TOM BOGGIONI
19 FEB 2016

In exclusive interviews with the New York Daily News, survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of a Duggar family pastor detail how the Christian leader recruited them from their parents and preyed upon rape victims who came to him seeking help.

Bill Gothard, 81, who previously ran the Institute in Basic Life Principles which heavily influenced the lifestyle of the Christian reality show Duggar family, is currently the subject of a lawsuit filed in Illinois by eight women against board members of the IBLP and Gothard. It was an IBLP center that Josh Duggar was sent to for treatment after he was caught molesting his sisters.

According to Joy Simmons and Jennifer Spurlock, they were abused by Gothard after they were shipped off to stay with him following sexual assaults by other men affiliated with his ministry.

“To have your education ripped from you and to have your childhood ripped from you, it’s extremely difficult. It’s just evil,” said Spurlock, who was 15 when she began working for and traveling with Gothard, who kept her from attending school.

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French Cardinal Barbarin under pressure for failure to remove accused priest

FRANCE
Catholic Culture

February 19, 2016

Cardinal Philippe Barbarin of Lyon, France, is under pressure to resign after acknowledging that he allowed a priest to remain in parish ministry after learning that the priest had been accused of sexual abuse.

The cardinal revealed that he first learned of accusations against Father Bernard Peynat “around 2007-2008.” The allegations against the priest dated back to the years between 1986 and 1991. At the time, Cardinal Barbarin said, he was assured that there had been no new charges since 1991.

Cardinal Albert Decourtray, who was Archbishop of Lyon at the time, suspended Father Peynat for six months, but then restored him to active ministry. Cardinal Barbarin, who was installed as the leader of the Lyon archdiocese in 2002, allowed him to remain in parish work.

It was only in 2014, Cardinal Barbarin recalled, that he met with a victim who brought new charges of abuse against Father Peynat. After consulting with the Vatican, the cardinal removed the accused priest from ministry.

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Mike Rezendes: “El periodismo investigativo permite que los poderosos respondan por lo que hacen”

CHILE
La Tercera

[Mike Rezendes: Investigative journalism allows the powerful to be held accountable for what they do.]

Rodrigo González M.
14 de febrero del 2016

En la sala de redacción de The Boston Globe, todos los periodistas se mueven a un ritmo más o menos similar. Todos, menos los cuatro reporteros que pertenecen al equipo denominado Spotlight, una especie de grupo de elite que trabaja guiado por su reloj interno y al que ningún jefe le pide nada en particular. Movidos por un olfato infalible, descubren las noticias más importantes de la ciudad y llegan hasta el final de ellas, dejando al descubierto los escándalos más innombrables y los personajes más siniestros. Un día de aquellos llega un nuevo editor al periódico y, muy amablemente, les pide que pongan los ojos en las denuncias de abusos sexuales de sacerdotes que se explicitan en una columna publicada en su propio periódico. Es decir, a su estilo, les pide que se dediquen a investigar ese caso. Varios meses después, aquel trabajo será recompensado con un Premio Pulitzer y muchos años más tarde todo será parte de una película cuyo nombre es simplemente Spotlight.

El filme, que esta semana se estrenó en Chile bajo el nombre de En primera plana, es un muy eficaz largometraje sobre el oficio periodístico y compite por seis premios Oscar, entre ellos a Mejor Película y Mejor Dirección. El elemento clave acá es el trabajo en equipo. Ellos son los reporteros Mike Rezendes (Mark Ruffalo); Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams); y Matt Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James). Todos son liderados por Walter Robinson (Michael Keaton), quien dirige y al mismo tiempo reportea. Ellos son Spotlight, el equipo de periodismo investigativo que ganó el Pulitzer en el 2003 tras provocar la renuncia del arzobispo de Boston Bernard Law (Len Cariou), acusado de encubrir casos de abusos sexuales al interior de la Iglesia católica. En este microcosmos laboral, el editor Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber) es el recién llegado que les pide dedicarse a investigar el caso.

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Cardinal Pell calls for inquiry into press leaks accusing him of abuse

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Carol Glatz Catholic News Service | Feb. 19, 2016

VATICAN CITY
Australian Cardinal George Pell called for an inquiry into the leaking of accusations that he is under police investigation for the alleged abuse of minors.
Calling the accusations “without foundation and utterly false,” the cardinal “strongly denies any wrongdoing. If the police wish to question him, he will cooperate, as he has with each and every public inquiry,” said a statement from the cardinal’s office in Rome Feb. 19.

“The cardinal understands that several media outlets have received confidential information leaked by someone within the Victorian police,” the government law enforcement agency in the Australian state of Victoria, the statement said.

“Given the serious nature of this conduct, the cardinal has called for a public inquiry to be conducted in relation to the actions of those elements of the Victorian police who are undermining the Royal Commission’s work,” it said. The Royal Commission Into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is a government inquiry into church, state and other institutions’ response to the sexual abuse of children.

The cardinal also called on the state prime minister and police minister “to immediately investigate the leaking of these baseless allegations,” the statement said.

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Editorial: Collins is right — let the commission do its work

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Editorial Staff | Feb. 19, 2016

The truth of the clergy sex abuse scandal would never have surfaced without the sustained courage of victims. In the same way, it will take the courage and work of victims, above all, to help return the church to health.

Marie Collins provides a stunning example of the kind of determination and courage required to get on with that latter phase of dealing with the scandal. It is enough that this abuse survivor from Ireland has dedicated so much of her life to establishing organizations and structures to protect children. That she would accept appointment to Pope Francis’ Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors is a most generous gift to the church. The risks in taking the assignment were both enormous and inherent.

We are grateful that she initially accepted and that she has decided to stay on through the most recent upheaval involving fellow member Peter Saunders and the commission’s decision that the only other victim on the commission take a leave of absence.

Personnel issues can be messy in any context, but particularly so when it appears that the institution that remained intentionally blind and deaf to the suffering of those abused by its priests was engaging in a new form of abuse.

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Vatican’s number three furiously denies claims he sexually abused boys in Australia

ROME
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 19 Feb 2016

The Vatican’s economy minister is reportedly being investigated on suspicion of sexually abusing altar boys when he was a priest.

George Pell, an Australian cardinal who as the Holy See’s finance chief is third in the hierarchy after Pope Francis, is the most senior Vatican figure to be accused of sexually abusing minors.
In a lengthy statement, he angrily denied the accusations, saying they were “utterly false”.

The Herald Sun newspaper, based in Melbourne, reported that a police taskforce in the state of Victoria has been investigating the 74-year-old cardinal over the last 12 months over allegations that he abused between five and 10 boys.

Cardinal Pell, the former Archbishop of Sydney, has long been accused of shielding predatory priests in Australia, but this is the first time that he has been accused of abusing children himself.

Australian police have compiled a dossier containing allegations that he committed “multiple offences” when he was a priest in the town of Ballarat in Victoria and later when he was archbishop of Melbourne, the Herald Sun reported.

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Top aide to Pope Francis denies Australia abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
GlobalPost

Agence France-Presse
Feb 19, 2016

Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell on Friday claimed he was the victim of a smear campaign after it emerged that Australian police are investigating claims he groomed and abused five to 10 boys during his time as a priest.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false,” a statement issued by Pell’s office in Rome said after Melbourne’s Herald Sun newspaper reported that a police taskforce had been investigating him for over a year over allegations that he abused the boys.

The Herald Sun’s revelations prompted global abuse survivors’ network SNAP to call on Pope Francis to immediately suspend the 74-year-old from his senior role in the Vatican’s bureaucracy.

“Over a year, more than a dozen cops and they say they’ve found five or 10 alleged victims of Pope Francis’s top aide,” SNAP spokesperson Joelle Casteix said.

“That’s pretty credible and serious. For the safety of kids, the pontiff should suspend Pell.”
Details of the probe emerged a week before Pell is due to give evidence by video link to an Australian inquiry into abuse by priests in the town of Ballarat, near Melbourne.

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Abuse Commission Shake-up

UNITED STATES
America

February 29, 2016 Issue
The Editors

Whatever the merits of the decision, the optics of removing one of the two survivors of clerical sexual abuse serving on the Holy See’s Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors were not good. Peter Saunders, the founder of the U.K.-based National Association for People Abused in Childhood, was given a leave of absence following a 15-to-0 vote of no confidence by the 17-member commission (with one abstention) at a meeting in Rome on Feb. 6.

Mr. Saunders had been an outspoken critic of the church’s ongoing efforts to prevent and respond to the abuse crisis; he claimed in the press that Pope Francis had gone back on a promise to attend the commission meetings and criticized the pope’s controversial decision to appoint Bishop Juan Barros, accused of covering up the sexual abuse crimes of a Chilean priest, to the Diocese of Osorno. Following the commission’s vote, Mr. Saunders told The Irish Times, “I cannot be part of something that runs alongside a system that is essentially corrupt and unwilling to do the right thing…protect children.” Other members, including Marie Collins, an abuse survivor, insist that the role of the commission is not to comment or intervene in individual cases but to consider overall church policy and to advise Francis on best practices in fighting sexual abuse. There were concerns that Mr. Saunder’s work as an advocate could interfere with this specific mission.

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HBE Publishing Releases “The Swan Garden”

CALIFORNIA
Press Release Rocket

Written by Anne Biggs, the book is a fictional re-telling of the author’s own birth and adoption story.

CLOVIS, CALIF., February 19, 2016—HBE Publishing is proud to announce the release of “The Swan Garden” written by Anne Biggs. The book was published under the company’s imprint publisher, Paradigm Hall Press, and explores the terrible conditions of unwed pregnant women in Ireland during the 1950s and 60s.

“The Swan Garden” tells the story of a young woman who survives a brutal rape and gives birth in a mother baby home in Ireland, after which she endures horrific abuse in a Magdalene Laundry. While she does eventually escape, she never forgets the baby that was taken from her and gradually learns the truths that were kept from her all those years ago.

The book is based on the author’s own birth story. Anne Biggs was born in a mother baby home in the Midlands of Ireland and spent five years in a Dublin orphanage before an American couple from California adopted her. Biggs spent 23 years searching for her birth mother and eventually met her in 2008. Unfortunately, the shame and trauma Biggs’s birth mother experienced prevented the two from forming any sort of relationship.

Today, Biggs lives in California and is an English teacher at the secondary level. She wrote “The Swan Garden” to honor her birth mother and the life she may have lived in both the mother baby homes and the Magdalene Laundries.

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Books blog: Archbishop Charles Scicluna is right. We should all know the grim story behind Spotlight

UNITED KINGDOM
Catholic Herald

by Francis Phillips posted Friday, 19 Feb 2016

‘Betrayal’ is a grim story but every Catholic should read it

I have just been reading a grim book: Betrayal (Profile Books, £8.99).

First published in 2002, it has now been reissued and updated to coincide with the release of the film Spotlight. For those few remaining people who might not know what the film is about, the Spotlight team were a small group of investigative reporters on the Boston Globe newspaper, who first alerted America to the systemic sexual abuse of young people by a small group of priests in the Boston archdiocese.

Almost the worst feature of this harrowing saga was that Cardinal Law, archbishop of Boston, had known about this abuse yet had constantly moved the priests involved from parish to treatment centre and from treatment centre back to another parish.

Those who did follow the story at the time and as it unfolded in other US dioceses and around the world, will know the main factors of this scandal: abusive priests were seen as sinful rather than criminal, and capable of changing their behaviour; the Church’s concern was to hush up the problem and to protect the institution at all costs; and the great majority of the Boston victims were post-pubescent teenage boys (whereas paedophilia is attraction to pre-pubescent children).

In 2001 the Spotlight team was first alerted to the now notorious case of Father John Geoghan and set out to determine “whether the Geoghan case was an anomaly or part of a pattern”. In the course of their investigations they discovered that Cardinal Law had secretly settled cases where 70 priests had been accused of sexual abuse. After legal proceedings the archdiocese finally gave the prosecutors the names of more than 90 priests.

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Former Coach Faces Sexual Abuse Charges

WEST VIRGINIA
WTRF

WHEELING, W.Va –
A former Wheeling Jesuit girls basketball coach appeared in court on Thursday in Ohio County.

Maqsood Harrington is facing charges of sexual abuse by a person in position of trust and soliciting a minor with a computer device.

Any kind of proposed plea agreement must be in by March 11.

A criminal complaint was filed last August by an alleged victim while he was working at the YMCA in Elm Grove.

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“Shocking”: Suspension lifted against former Greenbush, MN priest convicted of sexual abuse

MINNESOTA
Valley News

Greenbush, MN (Valley News Live) “Shocking”, that’s how a former, Clay County prosecutor describes the decision by the Catholic Church, to lift the suspension of a former northwestern Minnesota priest.

Sixty-one-year old Father Joseph Jeyapaul, plead guilty and was convicted of Criminal Sexual Conduct, involving a teenage girl at Greenbush, Minnesota.

Now, he’s back in his native country of India, and the Church has lifted its suspension against him, which could allow him to work in the church again.

Father Joseph Jeyapaul plead guilty to 4th Degree Criminal Sexual Conduct for abusing a teenage girl at his residence, next to the Catholic Church in Greenbush, Minnesota.

Jeyapaul wound up serving 4 years in prison, before being sent back to his native Country of India, where now, church officials have lifted a suspension against him. It will be decided in May, whether Jeyapaul will begin working in the church again.

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Finanzchef des Vatikans weist Missbrauchsvorwürfe zurück

VATIKAN
Unternehmen Heute

Der Finanzchef des Vatikans hat Vorwürfe des sexuellen Missbrauchs Minderjähriger zurückgewiesen. Eine Zeitung hatte berichtet, die australische Polizei ermittle gegen Kardinal George Pell wegen des Verdachts, mehrere Jungen missbraucht zu haben.

Der Finanzchef des Vatikans hat Vorwürfe des sexuellen Missbrauchs Minderjähriger zurückgewiesen. “Die Vorwürfe sind ohne Grundlage und vollkommen falsch”, erklärte sein Büro am Freitag in Rom. Zuvor hatte die Zeitung “Herald Sun” in Melbourne berichtet, die australische Polizei ermittle seit einem Jahr gegen den aus Australien stammenden Kardinal George Pell wegen des Verdachts, fünf bis zehn Jungen missbraucht zu haben.

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Catholic school sex abuse scandal: Finding the courage to confront the past

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 20, 2016

Henrietta Cook
Education Reporter at The Age

Principals at schools caught up in the horrific Catholic sex abuse scandals are taking positive steps to prevent it happening again.

It took decades – and a firm psychologist – for Peter Blenkiron​ to find the courage to return to his old school. He didn’t want to, but he knew he must. Not just for him; for all those other kids.

His psychologist slowly walked with him towards the grand, wrought iron gates. The looming red brick building looked the same. So did the steps behind the chapel, where the worst stuff happened. Blenkiron’s heart was pounding, and his calloused hands were sweaty. And suddenly he was 11 again.

“It was like an internal bomb went off,” he says. “My intestines turned to broken glass. It cut me into pieces inside.”

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Cardinal Pell strikes back at allegations of child abuse

VATICAN CITY
Catholic World Report

Vatican City, Feb 19, 2016 / 10:05 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Friday Cardinal George Pell forcefully denied an alleged police investigation’s claim of “multiple offenses” of child sexual abuse, calling the accusations patently untrue.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false,” a Feb. 19 statement from Cardinal Pell’s office read.

The timing of the media leak on the alleged investigation “is clearly designed to do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermines the work of the Royal Commission,” it said.

Cardinal Pell is a member of the Council of Cardinals advising Pope Francis and a past archbishop of the Sydney and Melbourne archdioceses. He is also the prefect of the newly formed Secretariat for the Economy which is overseeing Vatican finances.

He is scheduled to testify before Australia’s Royal Commission Feb. 29 regarding claims that surfaced last year accusing the cardinal of moving “known pedophile” Gerald Ridsdale, of bribing a victim of the later-defrocked priest, and of ignoring a victim’s complaint.

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Vatican finance chief denies sexually abusing boys

VATICAN CITY
The Local

Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell on Friday dismissed accusations he sexually abused boys during his time as a priest which are reportedly being investigated by Australian police.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false,” a statement issued by Pell’s office in Rome said after the Melbourne-based Herald Sun newspaper reported that a police taskforce in the state of Victoria have been investigating Pell for the last year over allegations that he abused between five and 10 boys.

Details of the probe emerged a week before Pell is due to give evidence by video link to an Australian inquiry into abuse by priests in the town of Ballarat, near Melbourne.

The 74-year-old cardinal has been derided for saying he is too ill to make the journey home to testify in person over alleged cover-ups during his time as the head of Australia’s Catholic hierarchy.

He has always denied knowing about any abuse in Ballarat. In his statement he attacked the leaking of details of the ongoing investigation to the Herald Sun as malicious and the allegations against him as spurious.

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Vatican financial chief denies he is under investigation

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

Rosie Scammell | February 19, 2016

VATICAN CITY (RNS) The Vatican’s financial chief, Cardinal George Pell, is denying media reports that he is under investigation for allegedly sexually abusing children in Australia.

The “Herald Sun,” a Melbourne publication, on Friday (Feb. 19) claimed Pell was the subject of a probe in Australia’s southeast state of Victoria over allegations he sexually abused between five and 10 boys.

Victoria police declined to comment on the media reports.

Pell, who serves as the Vatican’s finance chief, described the allegations as “without foundation and utterly false.”

“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 (Australian) Royal Commission,” said the statement issued by his Rome office.

Pell is due to testify before the Royal Commission about the church’s institutional responses to child sexual abuse later this month, appearing by video link from Rome. Abuse survivors have pushed for Pell to testify in person, but he was granted permission to testify from Italy for health reasons.

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Australian Cardinal George Pell denies abusing children

VATICAN CITY
Bangkok Post

AFP

VATICAN CITY – Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell on Friday dismissed accusations he sexually abused boys during his time as a priest which are reportedly being investigated by Australian police.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false,” a statement issued by Pell’s office in Rome said after the Melbourne-based Herald Sun newspaper reported that a police taskforce in the state of Victoria have been investigating Pell for the last year over allegations that he abused between five and 10 boys.

Details of the probe emerged a week before Pell is due to give evidence by video link to an Australian inquiry into abuse by priests in the town of Ballarat, near Melbourne.

The 74-year-old cardinal has been derided for saying he is too ill to make the journey home to testify in person over alleged cover-ups during his time as the head of Australia’s Catholic hierarchy.

He has always denied knowing about any abuse in Ballarat. In his statement he attacked the leaking of details of the ongoing investigation to the Herald Sun as malicious and the allegations against him as spurious.

“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 said.

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